The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, December 01, 1945, Image 3

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    r,-WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS
Plan to Remove Food Subsidies;
Atom Bomb Figures in Allies'
Postwar Diplomatic Movements
________ Released by Western Newspaper Union. ■—
{EDITOR'S NOTE: Wben opinions nre expressed in these columns they are those of
Western Newspaper Union’s news analysts and not necessarily of this newspaper.)
No longer capable of doing heavy labor, and sick, diseased and dis
pirited, German prisoners of war released by Russians trek through Ber
lin on their return to homes in the west.
SUBSIDIES:
Time Removals
Designed to hold down living costs
during wartime, government subsi
dies to food producers and proces
sors will be gradually removed to
lessen the impact on the civilian
price structure. Stabilization Direc
tor John C. Collet revealed.
Tentative plans call for the aboli
tion of subsidies on vegetable short
ening by December 1, 1945; cheese,
not later than February 28, 1946,
and the $1.30 rollback per 100 pounds
on pork not later than March 31,
1946, with the remaining pork pay
ment scheduled to go not later than
June 30, 1946. In addition, subsi
dies on canned and frozen vegeta
bles, dry edible beans, prunes and
raisins will be terminated at the
close of the 1945 crop year, with
dairy production, fluid milk, feeder
cattle, beef, sheep and lambs pnd
flour payments expected to be ended
not later than June 30, 1946.
With the department of agricul
ture estimating the cost of food sub
sidies for the fiscal year ending next
June 30 at $1,798,000,000, payments
on slaughter of livestock are ex
pected to total $535,400,000; dairy
production, $534,000,000; flour. $190,
000,000, and beef cattle, $40,000,000.
LABOR-INDUSTRY:
Discuss Bargaining
Backed by AFL Chieftain William
Green and representatives of man
agement, burly John L. Lewis of the
United Mine Workers ripped the CIO
proposal to tie wages into the pres
ent labor-industry conference in
Washington, D. C., and demanded
that talks be confined to establish
ing machinery for settlement of dis
putes.
In spearheading the opposition to
the CIO proposal based upon Presi
dent Truman's wage policy, Lewis
asserted that the problem of pay
should be left to collective bargain
ing and not strait-jacketed by any
formula based on cost of living. In
granting employees increases and
adjusting their price structure, em
ployers will be governed by compe
tition to assure reasonable costs,
Lewis said.
Even as the 36 labor and manage
ment representatives pitched into
their task, trouble brewed in the
automobile and steel industries, with
the CIO asking the government to
intervene following collapse of nego
tiations with General Motors and
U. S. Steel corporation over wage in
creases to maintain wartime take
home pay.
ARMY:
Step Up Discharges
Mostly European vets originally
marked for redeployment to the Pa
cific, 50-point enlisted men present
ly home on furlough or on temporary
duty in the U. S. have become
eligible for discharge, the army re
ported.
At the same time, the army an
nounced that no enlisted man with
21 or more months of service since
September 16, 1940, will be sent
overseas for permanent duty except
for language specialists, regular
army personnel and volunteers.
Also exempt from overseas as
signment are officers who have 33
or more months of service, or med
ical officers with 30 months, except
for those who have chosen to remain
on active duty, are regular army
men or are classed as scarce spe
cialists. Nurses who are 30 years of
age or have 12 points will not be sent
overseas.
GRAIN SUPPLIES:
The bulk of the supplies of wheat
available for export in 1945-46 is in
North America, the department of
agriculture reports. With exports
from the United States currently
estimated at 300 to 325 million bush
els, shipments from Canada may be
about as large.
Under favorable transportation,
marketing and handling conditions,
somewhat larger exports would be
possible from the United States
though shipments from Argentina
mav fall short
FOREIGN AFFAIRS:
Atomic Talk
The red-hot question of sharing tha
atomic bomb featured the recent
diplomatic news as
the U. S., Britain
and Russia contin
ued their polite tug
of-war for favorable
positions in the con
struction of the
postwar world.
Russia's tough lit
tle Foreign Minis
ter Vyacheslav Mo
lotov started the
ball rolling in an
address on the eve
of the 28th anniver
Vyacheslav
Molotov
sary of the Red revolution, declar
ing that in this scientific age no such
discovery as the atomic bomb could
long remain a secret, and that
eventually the Soviet would have it.
Telling the world that possession
of the atomic bomb should not be
used as a diplomatic weapon in ob
taining advantages, Molotov also
said that its real effectiveness for
preserving peace has yet to be
tested.
Indirectly answering Molotov in
Britain’s house of commons, the
equally tough Foreign Minister Er
nest Bevin declared
Ernest Bevin
that it was entirely
proper for Britain,
Canada and the U.
S. to proceed slow
ly on the question of
sharing the atomic
bomb in view of its
tremendous poten
tialities. In finally
determining the
bomb's disposition,
he asserted, states
men and not scien
usts should make the final decision
because of their closer acquaintance
with political conditions.
In addressing commons, Bevin
rapped Russia hard, stating that
Britain had met every territorial de
mand of the Reds only to find them
increasing their claims, particularly
for control of North Africa and Eri
trea on the British lifeline to the east.
Meanwhile, Secretary of State
Byrnes projected the U. S. into the
international pic
ture with the reve
lation of this coun
try's support of an
Allied commission
to guarantee free
access to the Black
or Mediterranean
seas through the vi
tal Dardanelles and
Bosporus straits,
and the release of
Italy's territorial
views.
Sec. Byrnes
By calling for an Allied commis
sion, Byrnes favored revision of the
present Montreux agreement en
trusting Turkey with control of the
strategic straits, but countering the
Russian demand for military bases
along the vital waterways to assure
free passage.
In submitting its territorial views,
Italy agreed to readjustment of its
French and Yugoslavian boundaries
and establishment of Allied bases in
its former North African colonies,
but asked for retention of certain
Near Eastern possessions of econom
ic value.
All these diplomatic problems,
plus consideration of the question of
Jewish immigration in British con
trolled Palestine were reportedly
part of British Prime Minister Att
lee’s scheduled discussions with
President Truman.
AID POLIO VICTIMS
More than $1,000,000 in epi
demic aid has been disbursed by
the National Foundation for In
fantile Paralysis so far this
year, with more than three
fourths going to Illinois. No. Car
olina, New York and Virginia.
Principal expenses of National
Foundation chapters include
hospitalization and transporta
tion of patients, purchases of
special equipment and salaries
of doctors, nurses and other pro
fessional personnel.
CHINA*
Battlr On
Full-scale civil war loomed in
China as negotiations between com
munists and nationalists bogged and
the Reds took to the offense in an
effort to prevent Chiang Kai-shek’s
forces from infiltrating into their
northern strongholds.
As a result of the outbreak of hos
tilities, the U. S. decided to with
draw American troops from the
scenes of combat, the Yanks having
been used to aid nationalists in tak
ing over former Jap-held territory.
Removal of U. S. units did not sig
nify any reversal of policy in sup
porting Chiang, however, with re
ports that the administration would
continue to offer him material aid.
Thus did the threat of civil war,
following close upon V-J Day, damp
en long-suffering China's hopes for
a period of peace and tranquility in
which to unify the nation politically
and lay the foundation for economic
development and modernization.
FINLAND:
Try Leaders
Charged with refusal to mediate
differences with Russia and prose
cuting war on the side of the Axis
instead, eight prominent Finnish
leaders were arrested by the new
government and scheduled for early
trial in ths people’s court.
In the unprecedented movement of
a country to punish former leaders
for their official acts, Vaino Tanner,
dominant Finnish politico of 1941,
was accused of failing to take ad
vantage of a U. S.-British offer to
mediate with Russia that year.
Tanner again was named for fail
ure to accept a U. S. proposition to
conciliate Finnish-Russian differ
ences in 1943 along with former
President Risto Ryti, Foreign Min
ister Henrik Ramsay, Prime Min
ister Edwin LinkomieS, Gen. Rudolf
Walden, and Finance Minister Tyo
ko Reinikka.
POLITICS:
No Trend
Continued Democratic domination
of the big cities and Republican in
roads in small municipalities
marked the recent election results
and offered little clue to a political
trend prior to the all-important con
gressional elections in 1946.
Most significant feature of the bal
loting was the CIO’s failure again
to capture the mayoralty in Detroit,
Mich., motor car center of the U. S.
and United Automobile Workers
stronghold. Calling upon the unor
ganized residents of the city to rally
for an impartial rather than a labor
dominated administration. Mayor
Jeffries won re-election over CIO
Candidate Frankensteen by a com
fortable margin.
Maintaining their dominance over
the big municipalities, the Demo
crats handily won the mayoralties
of New York, Boston, Pittsburgh
and Cleveland, while Republicans
won back Buffalo, N. Y.. and New
Haven, Conn., after more than a doz
en years.
Sets Air Speed Record
Exciting possibilities for speedy post
war air travel were opened with the rec
ord-breaking performance of Britain's
jet-powered Gloster Meteor piloted bv
Capt. H. J. Wilson.
Smashing the former official mark of
481.84 miles per hour set by Capt. Fritz
Wendel of the German air force in 1939,
Wilson averaged 606 miles per hour in
four runs over a 1.86-mile course at
Herne Bay, England.
At Wilson’s rate of speed, excited sta
tisticians figured that a plane could
travel nonstop around the world in 41
hours: from Los Angeles, Calif., to
New York City in 3 hours and 59 min
utes; from Chicago, III., to Panama in 3
hours and 49 minutes, and from Chicago
to Mexico City in 2 hours and 46 min
utes.
NAZI SPY:
Tipped Off FBI
Asserting that his only intention in
accompanying saboteurs to the U. S.
in 1942 was to get out of Germany,
a Nazi spy disclosed the whole en
emy plot for damaging U. S. plants
and facilities and terrorizing civil- ,
ians to the FBI, leading to the early
roundup of the entire clique landed
by submarine.
Let off with 30 years imprisonment
for his disclosure and testimony at
the trial resulting in the execution
of six of the saboteurs and a life
sentence for another, the spy, George
Dasch, named the other conspira
tors and furnished information
which enabled the G-men to cover
their movements and track them i
down in New York and Chicago, 111 ,
In detailing the saboteurs’ mis
sion, Dasch told the FBI that the
TVA was marked for destruction
along with important industrial
plants, the Hell Gate bridge in New
York City, Ohio river locks, and im
portant railroad trackage. In addi
tion, the saboteurs planned to ter
rorize civilians by planting time
bombs in depot lockers and crowded
stores.
FIBER SOURCE:
Never grown in the western hemi
sphere before Pearl Harbor except
experimentally, abaca—from which
Manila rope is made—is now being
produced in quantity on five planta
tions of 27,500 acres in four Central '
American republics and Panama, j
the state department disclosed.
Western hemisphere production of
abaca, which was obtained largely
from the Philippines before the
war, may aggregate 25 million
pounds this year and from 45 to 50
million pounds in 1946.
DAR SAYS JUDGE BARRED
ITS DATA ON GROUNDS
ORGANIZATION WAS ‘UNFIT’
Trenton. N. J (CNS) Officials of
a local chapter of the DAR have
asserted that Federal Judge Phil
lip Forman kept them from distri
buting literature to new citizens in
his naturalization court on the
grounds that their organization
was unfit to deal with people of
barred races and creeds.
Though the Judge has denied
this, Mrs. Lyman Leavitt, secretary I
of the David Forman Chapter of j
the BAR said that late last month
he notified the group that they
were no longer welcome in his
cour because of the action taken in
denying the use of Constitution
Hall to Hazel Scott.
According to Airs. Leavitt^ Judge
Forman felt that Hazel Scott case
disqualified the DAR from having
contact with the peoples of many
_ — . —— I
races who apply for citizenship. So
far Judge Forman has denied a.iy
knowledge of the story.
“I never heard of this,” he said.
"I do not even know that the DAR
ever did distribute literature at
any naturalization court session.”
The next naturalization pror ed
:p.gK will b® held *h Judge Forman's
ci-uit Novembe ‘;9th.
- 1
*7UeJfome
K7oum
d&pxvitesi
I in WASHINGTON
By Walter Shead
WNU Corr*poMl—l
WNU WMsbiagton Buretu.
ISIS By St.. W. V.
Unions More Powerful
Now Than in 1919
HISTORY is repeating itself in the
labor field. Following World
War I there was a wave of strikes
which Involved, in 1919, approximate
ly four million workers, or almost
21 per cent of the entire industrial
working force.
Today, while less than 200,000 men
are now on strike, it is estimated
that before the end of the year or
shortly thereafter there may De
about three million strikers or about
11 per cent of the total workers.
The difference is that in 1919 unions
were not as tightly organized, they
did not have as many rights, there
was no collective bargaining. Unions
were financially unable to carry the
load of a long strike in those days.
Now unions are highly organized,
have more members, their treasuries
are bulging, and they are able to
hire the best economists, publicity
men and research organizations on
a par with Big Business. In addi
tion, they have favorable laws as
bulwarks and a basis for their
stands. They are conducting a high
ly organized propaganda or publicity
campaign, smart and effective.
Among these campaigns is one de
signed to woo the farmers.
The "Economic Outlo«k,” a month
ly publication of the department of
research and education of the CIO
in Washington, in its current issue,
is entirely devoted to propaganda
seeking to bridge the gap between
the farmer and the city worker.
"Six out of seven Americans who
work for a living are in overalls,”
the article says, “and five of the
seven work for wages; one of the
seven works at farming. These men
and women and their families form
most of the ‘public.’ These are the
people who make up the bulk of the
consuming class. The dollars they
earn and spend make America’s
i economic machine tick.
Issue Must Be Settled
“Now that the war is over, men
in overalls have a fight on their
hands to make America a full pro
duction country in peace as well as
in war. Not all Americans agree.
The time is here when that issue
must be settled. Wage earners are
the first to join the issue, for un
employment is growing. It’s a strug
gle for life, for the right to work,
for the right to raise a family by
decent living standards. And unless
these men in overalls win the battle
for full production, full employment
and full wages now, it won’t be long
before farmers in overalls are en
gaged in a life and death struggle
for good markets at parity prices.
For all men in overalls are in the
same boat, they ride the waves of
prosperity together, they sink to de
pression together. If wage earners
are making money, so are farmers.
If men walk the streets looking for
work, men on farms burn wheat,
dump milk, leave cotton unpicked.
That’s depression, and Main street
suffers while Wall street trembles.
‘‘Studies by the U. S. federal trade
commission indicate that factory la
bor cost of farm machinery is only
a small part of the total price
charged to farmers. For example, a
three-bottom tractor plow for which
farmers paid $153.50 had a manu
facturing labor cost of only $11.17.
For a cream separator, which had
about the highest manufacturing
cost of any agricultural implement,
the cost was $100.84 and only $14.66
went to the wage earners who pro
duced it. On that cream separator,
the manufacturer’s profits ran to 19
per cent and the retailer’s margin to
28 per cent of the selling price.
Unions Are Like Co-Ops
“Just as farmers have the right
to organize co-ops to get fair prices,
so city workers have the right to
organize unions to get fair wages and
working conditions. Nearly half of
all farmers. 2,730.000 in 1942-43, are
organized in 7.522 selling co-ops.
There are also 10,300 buying co-ops
with 1,520,000 farmer members More
than one-third of wage and salaried
workers, over 14 million, are organ
ized in labor unions. Labor, like
agriculture, deals with organized
business. Labor, like agriculture,
has organized to get a fair deal.
“When AAA crop control pro
grams were in effect, co-operating
farmers didn't like to have non
co-operators ride free. Those who
didn't co-operate got lower loans,
and with marketing quotas paid pen
alties on sales. It was the closed
shop in agriculture. Unions don't
like free riders either.
“Business got government privi
lege long ago It secured the right
to organize corporations. It also got
subsidies from the government, in
cluding high tariffs, franchises and
many other forms of privilege.
“Agriculture first won the right to
bargain collectively for fair prices
through tax-exempt co-ops. Then in
the 1930s laboi won the right to bar
gain collectively through unions. In
the 1930s also, agriculture won the
right to parity prices, correspond
ing to minimum wages, and to con
trol production, corresponding to
maximum hours
50
^ Clover Leaf ^
» Ice & Coal
co. 3
2009 North 27th St.
Phone JA-1090
100 j
I H. W. Smith’s Weekly- j
f Waiter’s
i Column
If you have any news about waiters, or anything
pertaining to them or their routine of living, call
H. W. Smith—HA-0800 and give him the news...
Bro. Tom Philips is doing very
good as his beautiful residence on
Corby street dropped in and said
hello. We can never tell when we
may be down.
Jerry Simpson, the extra size Pull
i man porter likes to read the Week
i column.
I Mr. Avant, the streamlined room
service man at Blackstone hotel en
joyed a lovely trip to Alabama to
bring his mother to Omaha and he
also had a fine visit to Denver and
other points in Colorado.
Mrs. V. S. Wheatly of 2519 Ham
ilton street entertained over the week
end of Nov. 17 his brother, P. J.
Wheatley and wife from Chicago.
R. R. boys on the job serving with
a smile.
Waiters at the Omaha Club with
Capt. Earl Jones taking very good
care of the service with a quick
step.
Waiters at the Hill hotel toping the
service at all times.
Fontenelle hotel waiters going
! good.
Paxton hotel headwaiter and crew
all ready for the holidays rush.
The Treatment
of Cancer
Treatment of cancer is essent
ially divided into three different
methods. Either
it is removed
surgically or it
is killed by X
stand the treat
rays or radium.
To better under
ment of cancer,
it is necessary to
understand what
the nature of
cancer is.
Every plant, Dr. Moseley
animal or human body is made up
of millions of cells. These cells
are so small that they can only be
seen through a microscope. All
life begins when the female egg is
joined or ‘fertilized” by a cell
from the male. The result of
this “fertilization” is a single cell
which keeps on multiplying and
growing until millions of cells are
present in the form of an infant
offspring.
As these cells continue to multi
ply, the offspring continues to
grow. After a while all cellur
growth stops except to replace
tissue or skin which has been in
jured. The stopping of this cel
lur growth is achieved by some
natural means, not yet known to
medical science.
Some people, however, do not
respond to this natural check on
growth. Instead, something with
in their chemical makeup stimu
lates the cells so that they keep
on growing and multiplying. This
growth, if permitted to go on un
checked, pushes aside the nearby
healthy tissues and destroys them
by choking off their normal sup
ply of blood. In some cases some
of these growing cells break off
and are carried by the blood
stream to other parts of the body
where, once again, they continue
to grow and multiply and destroy
other normal tissue. This wild
growth of cells is what medical
men can cancer.
If these wild cells can be remov
ed before they begin to spread
through the blood stream and oth
er parts of the body, the chances
of cure are very high. But in
cases where the cell growth has j
spread to other parts of the body, |
X-rays or radium treatment is i
necessary to kill off such cells.
Treatment by X-rays or radium
is effective if the cancer has not
spread to points within the body
which are out of the range of
their healing rays. Sometimes
both types of treatment are used
together in order to get a more '
complete effect of cure.
Because cancer cells are killed
by the rays of radium or X-rays
while normal tissue is not too eas
ily affected, it is possible to give
a cancer patient a treatment of
these rays which is sufficient to
kill the cancer but not the sur
rounding normal parts of the
body. In many cases, these-"rays
are used after removal of a can
cer by surgery. This is done to
make sure that any cancer tissue
which may have been left by the
surgeon is destroyed.
Due to the danger of cancerous
cells spreading to parts of the >
body which cannot be reached by
X-rays or radium, it is important
that treatment be starfted early
to avoid the possibility of spread.
In this fact lies the secret of suc
cessful cancer treatment. CAN
CER MUST BE TREATED
EARLY!
Read The Greater Omaha Guide,
for All the News!
The WEEK
(BY H. W. SMITH HA-0800)
Admiral Halsey, commander of the
Third U. S. Fleet, was greeted by
Mayor Kelly as he arrived in Chicago
on Nov. 18.
The horse racing season closed on
Nov. 19 in Chicago and a very large
donation was given to charitable in
stitutions. The amount was one hun
dred and twenty-five thousand dol
lars.
A 13-year-old girl w$s run over
and killed in Chicago on Nov. 18 by
a truck. The driver was captured by
two hunters and returned to the
scene of the accident.
A Japanese ship carried 2,900 Chi
nese prisoners back to China from
Fukroku, Japan on Nov. 11th.
Field Marshall Henry Marthune
Wilson will speak at the Illinois St.
Andrews Society one hundredth an
niversary on the first of December at
the Stevens hotel in Chicago.
Supply Minister Paul Kronecker
reports that Belgium will receive 99
million dollars the reverse lend lease
cost.
A mother in Chicago finds her
baby dead and slashes her wrist. She
locked herself in the bathroom.
After a 7 weeks search Chicago po
lice arrested two men and a blonde
woman for robbing taverns.
The U. S. navy headquarters in
Washington, D. C. made public a
casualty list Nov. 11th. It includes
dead and safe ones. Negroes vote in
Tennessee. No poll tax required let
us hope other Southern States will
do likewise. Telephone operators
strike has interrupted long distance
calls between Omaha and Chicago.
A woman barricaded herself in her
home in Brooklyn, N Y., and police
entered by a second story window.
Three fur coats stolen from a South
Omaha laundry were found in laun
dry bag under a front porch at 5216
South 28th St.
Northern Baptist of 34 states will
make a mission crusade to raise 14
million dollars to care for needy per
sons in the starving area.
Plans were laid Nov. 23 at the
Nebraska state convention office. A
thief was very obliging in a small
town in Nebraska. He left the amount
of money for sugar he had taken.
Read the Greater Omaha Guide
for all the news and tell all of your
friends to do likewise.
Mrs. Alma Scoggins, formery of
Omaha is now residing in New York
and will very soon be a party to a
name changing and also she is a can
didate to be a grandmother and her
son has made the head line. And it
looks as though Omaha is too small
for all the family as they gave Omaha
the once over and we all hope to read
of them going places and doing many
things.
This writer attended service at
Cleaves Temple on Sunday morning,
Nov. 25 and the procedure of the
service was very fine. The very ac
tive ushers were up to the minute
and the very lovely choir was at its
best and al lthe very friendly mem
bers were extending a fellowship wel
come to all visitors and the pastor,
Rev. Douglas preached a very won- \
derful sermon. He also made mention
and advised our group to trade with
our race that are in business and
help them. And we would be helping
ourselves.
•STORM - SASH
Paint — Roofing
SUTHERLAND LUMBER CD
2920 ‘L’ St. 11A-1200
‘‘It is Safe to be Hungry’ at l
The Sharp Inn Cafe
2421 North 24th Street
.Watch for the Announcement
for future delivery service.
Phone JA-9293
L. Glenn, N. Johnson, Props.
kelson f urniture Co.
2911 NORTH 16TH ST.
WE PAY TOP CASH PRICES
FORGOOD USED FURNITURE
• When furnishing your home SEE US FIRST.
Always a large stock of Good Furniture at the
“Right” Price.
2911 North 16th Street AT-4805
—GUY NELSON, Owner—
WANTS BAN REMOVED
Washington, DC.A petition to
revoke a 1940 Swedish government
ban on a biography of Herman
Goering, written by Kurt Singer,
above, famed author, wag on file
today with the Swedish legation
here, it was earned. The minister
from Sweden to the U. S„ Herman
Ericksson. was to forward the ap
plication to King Gustave V of
Sweden and the Swedish Depart
ment of Justice in Stockholm at the
request of Singer, one of the edit
ors of This Month Magazine and
author of the current best-selling
Prentice-Hall book, "Spies and
Traitors of World War 11”. ‘When
I wrote this book about Goering
. whom l have met. Swedish neutral
ity was in danger and the book
was banned, "Singer, who was ar
rested when the ban wag issued de
clared. "Naturally this brought
I QUOTES I
or THE WEEK
"It cries like s baby, leaps 20
i feet high, and steals chickens.”
Pottstown, Pa., residents describ- I
ing “mystery beast” tn suburbs.
—————
"We use our potatoes for bar
rage balloons.”—Gov. Hildreth,
Maine. "We ship ours one to a
fiat car."—Gov. Gossett, Idaho,
in debate on spud magnitude.
"It’s too expensive and too
fancy.” — Los Angeles judge,
prohibiting purchase of $40,000
house for film actress Peggy Ann
Gamer, 13.
“Passage of the (Full Employ
ment) bill would mean accep
tance of the principle of a State
managed economy.”—F. A. Kors
meyer, financial writer.
"No system of government Is
going to work unless the people
j do.” — The Holt (Mich.) Re
i corder.
—
“It would be a dull world If f
we were all alike.” — British
Prime Minister Attlee, address
| ing Congress.
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Do you suffer from
nervous
tension
On ‘CERTAIN DAYS’ of the month?
Helps Build Up Resistance
Against Such Distress!
Do functional periodic disturbances
cause you to feel "nervous as a witch,"
60 restless, Jittery, hlghstrung, perhapa
tired, "dragged out"—at such times?
Then don’t delay! Try this great med
icine—Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound to relieve such symptoms.
It’s one of the best known and most
effective medicines for this purpose.
Pinkham’s Compound helps nattthe!
Taken regularly — It helps build up
resistance against such distress. A very
sensible thing to do! Positively no
harmful opiates or habit forming In
gredients In Pinkham’s Compound.
Also a grand stomachic tonic! Follow
label directions. Buy todayl
Jfy<fa£.(PimAhcvmb
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
me much Inconvenience and flnanc
ial loss. Now that Georing ls con
sidered a war criminal, and the
Nasi government is utterly crushed
I hope Swedish democracy will re
voke its previous decision and lift
this confiscatory order on the book
"Goering—Germany’s Most Danger
ous Man” was first printed in Swed
ish in 1939.
*
FOR WHOLESOME
RECREATION MAKE
Victory Bowling Alley
2410 LAKE ST.
Tour Headquarters After
Working Hours.
T. Mosley, Proprietor
TELEPHONE JA-9175
---
(FLORENCE lj
Super- -Service Station:
T. E. QUINN; Proprietor
TEXACO PRODUCTS
• TIRES & BATTERIES
IPHONE KE. 2306
8510 North 30th St.
Omaha, Nebraska ':
' We wish to Announce »\
THE OPENING OF THE
G & J Smoke Shop :
2118 NORTH 24th Street
Everything in the Line of
CIGARS, CIGARETTES, & i;
SOFT DRINKS !|
Jackson & Godbey, Props. ];
,
Evans’ Radio
& Electric Repair
- Shop
2702 Lake Street
For Sale
Irons, Toasters, Waffle Griddl
es, Perculators and many other
Electrical Appliances
AT A REASONABLE PRICE
Henry W. Evans, Proprietor
HIGHEST PRICES PAID
for FURNITURE,
RUGS, STOVES
“Call Us First”
NATIONAL TuRNITURE
Company
—AT1725—
iHinHniiiiimtuiniHiniHHtinnjm
Lake Street
TAVERN
Inc.
2229 LAKE ST.
Omaha, 10, Nebraska
(formerly Rakes’
Buffet, Myrtis’
_ Tavern)
IS NOW
LAKE STREET TAVERN
Inc.
“Always A Place
To Park”
Johnson Drug Co.
2306 North 24th
—FREE DELIVERY—
WE 0998
Gross
JEWELRY &
LOAN CO.
,’honc JA-46.V
formerly at 24th
niH Erskine St.
NEW LOCATION
514 N 'W"''
8B99H CHECKED
1 9 . AN in a Jiffy -
SI 9 V 9 9 -cr Money B-wi
For quick relief from itching caused by eczema
athlete’s foot, scabies, pimples and other itch.na
conditions, use pure, cooling, medicated, liquio
D. D. D. Prescription. A doctor’s formula.
Greaseless and stainless. Soothes, comforts ard
quickly calms intense itching. 35c trial bottle
proves it, or money back. Don't suffer. Ask youi
druggist today for D. O. D. PRESCRIPTION.
TRAD
We can’t make enough Smith Eros. Couch
Drops to satic-y everybody. Cur output is
still restricted. Euy erdy what you need.
Smith Eros, have soothed coughs due to colds
since 1847. Black or Menthol—still only 54.
SMITH BROS. COUGH DROPS .
BLACK OR MENTHOL— St (\
gjgar mark