HUCKLEBERRY FtNN± !... - --- . _ _, Hcy Tow/, \ CO»«o»i OJT J (jjA fljrtSeRJZ. _*• e/fnv / rWMBGK etfrfT- 1 -V*PE«SOrtAHE A T f Emai£ ASodT Jo rtXD A SALECtASi ^ /ViEETiwg-_, / void, wR \ SCrtOOl 1 BiHA HOIO A MCETlWtf I ( *oo$e ih about S^fe mm nnTtn/A r mil odm , nugt*>. vfeOlO rvT voU une ib so up To Tue *TTiC *mO ViSiT A UTTLe WrtilE? _.* JIM STEELE ' ‘ By MELVIN TAPLEY JIM/LOOK/HERE ^ COMES SOMEBODY I ... HE'S HEADED STRAIGHT THIS WAY/ - r-* -HE'S COMING- FROM \ THE DIRECTION OF THE \ -AgOR KRAAL/MAY£E ) HE CAN OrlVE SOME INFCj wAgOUTTHE LAYOU77/ "HALT/— SA-AY JIM/TO* I WONDER IF HE'S THE (jUY LOOKS LIRE ETONE OF THE WORKERS HE'S HOPPED UP/HE fl HEDSTRCM HAD v DOESN'T EVEN SEEM A PENNED UP? WHAT / TO HEAR ME/ WHAT/ \ DO YOU THINK, / ZGrlVES? \OSER BREEZY By F. MELVIN fuxxsute ]vVjvTno pJT605H,^E£ZV?1 & Sa\\£THiN&'£ rxf IDIFFERENT^J j IhHitiii pi nigMi ..IT'S A NEW , HUSBAND//? '—i TAN TOPICS Vfe* By CHARLES ALLEN “Keep looking him in the eye, George!” Actordinb to the latest, flyinp saucers may replace plartes. Do not drink from them though, they’re not replacinb cups. Hign Fire Ton For many years deaths In the tJnited States due to fire have been AMrafftnff oroimJ 10 000 9 vabb / — **lt Pays To Look WelT’ MAYO’S BARBER SHOP Ladies and Children’s Work A Specialty 2422 Lake Street i neavy xauters Latest statistics show that the United State* has more than 22 tele phones for *very 100 inhabitants, compared ta 2.2 telephones per 100 inhabitants in the world as a whole. New York Leads New York City has more tele phones than any city in the world, with a total of .2,218,000. This com pares wife 1,290,000 in all of South America. "Next Door” *r ted shearer “I really don’t see why people are so afraid of a dentist . . - CPORTS OUT OF ADAM'S HAT r —— JtfRovER Cleveland M ALEXANDER - AM ALL-TIME PlTCHIN© •BEAT —IN 2o , . TEARS HE WON i I 375 ©AMES v, " I (28 IN HIS FIRST .# season;, * j I and pitched k 90 SHUTOUTS U/ V- -n I ALEX WAS VOTED A MUCH MERITED NICHE IN BASE ' Ball's hall of fame 1 i JUST NINE TEARS \S ^Aeo/ < I cvr-*~ •-* .1 WHEN you CONSIDER WHAT BASEBALL HOLDOUTS WANT , THESE DAYS IT'S INTEREST- , l ING TO NOTE THAT HIS TOP & SALARY WAS ?U, OOO/ I m \ P * baseball |/i Mtttn LI JHH- never W “cUMC/ PORBET ALEX r «wa /Strolling * from + the bull pen to « / ffiBF STRIKE OUT LA32ERI • — - A1 ^ WITH THE BASES FULL ! IN THE LAST SAME OF THE 26 SEAieS f Ideal Hog size Moderately fat hogs, weighing be tween UO and 240 pounds alive, pro duce hams, shoulders and sides of the moat desirable size for curing. Shows Sense Without eyes and living under ground, tiie earthworm senses the fall of night and wriggles to the sur face of the earth. Milk ta Industry la more and more Industries iwnv Is being used to druarcwe employees’ health and ooonWcact fatigue. Re ductfttas fti accidents with an Jm prowiment In safety,'’less absentee ism <£w teflllness, increased produc tion dbnag hours of fatigue low potate, are reported where milk is being served between meals or add ed to diets. Life at a Glance By David Bethe It's a case of committing the same mistake Harold Lloyd did. I when he closed the gate after the horse had scampered out, Senator Taft of Ohio is ready now for a change in the new Labor Law, of which he is co-author. They cook ed up a clause, which prohibited unions from active political cam paigns and Congress passed it over President Truman’s vet®. Now the Good Sfenator Taft is concerned quite a bit about it. Maybe he has just discovered that the clause might not be in the framework of free speech and a free press. But The Truth Of The Matter. Senator Taft would like very much to have a little of the union pres sure in his stable in 1948. But I am mighty afraid he closed the gates too late. The irate protests are already out grazing viciously across the country. The Abolition Of Rent Control has proved its worth to the avar icious landlords throughout the country. In New York City, there was a 25 per cent increase in dis posses for reasons other tha* non. payment of rents during the first seven days of July. Believe me, the little salaried man and woman may wake up soon in a flurry of high prices that will all but smother them. There is coal, steel too, which will reflect the increase the miners recently secured. Ps affect will be felt in every com modity—even in old pots and pans. For Some Unexplainable Reason folks will not learn to understand the present by studying the past. Oh, but they do have the op portunity of better understanding the past by observing the present Sometimes men see their mistakes too late, or they don’t see them at After World War 1, every living head tried his best to squeeze his brother and friend for a nickel and dime. So hungry and greedy were they iif the days of prosper ity. Why, you would have thought that business in its rosy and pro fitable state was going to last ' r ever. This greedy reaching out continued for exactly eleven years. Then one afternoon, all the papers throughout the nation and the world, splashed headlines about the downfall of Wall Street. Yes, The Very Foundation of our capitalistic system had tum bled, and was swaying. Those were ominious headlines, if you re member them, that afternoon—I haven’t forgotten them. Strangely enough, there had never been political and economic prognostigators, who said it could never happen here. When the crash came, they stood dazed and helpless—like a little child—sur rounded by all the protection in the world, but unable to figure out how to use it. Here were those satesmen and ecomoic experts, armed with all the resources any civilized nation needs to give its citizens a livilihood, yet they could not devise any means to use it. Even Mr. Hoover, who cannot be held entirely responsible for the cracking ecomony, was so shocked, he could do nothing more than lift his voice meekly in a lame assurance that prosperity was just around the corner. Yes, everybody just stood with their hands outreaching. Banks, real estate brokers, landlords, rail roads, steel mills insurance com panies, farmers plantation Owners all had their hands outreaching. But this time, they were reaching with their bellies full of nickels and dimes. They were reaching for help—for some means by which they could find a place to spend the change. And it was not Until Franklin Roosevelt arrived on the scene with bis f'Tew Deal, djd life in this wealthy Country take on a spur of activity. We Are Easy To Forget. But the next two or three years may determine whether our ecomony is a solid on, or will totter at the first cry of Wall Street. Handled Many Times Iron ore is handled five times from the time it is removed from the earth until it emerges from the furnace as liquid metaL Only Huguenot Church Only Huguenot church in Amer ica is at Charleston, S. C. It was founded in 1687. Warren Recital - - Continued from Page 1 lett, Mrs. Lynnwood Hall, Dr. A. L. Hawkins, Mrs. Addie Foxall Hinton, Dr. & Mrs. Milton John son, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Hayes, Mrs. Zeuobia Heckman, Mrs. Ag nes Jones, Mr. George Kennard, Miss Ethel Jones, Mrs. Janie Johnson, Mrs. Anna Mary Ken nedy, Mrs. E. M. Killingsworth. Mrs. Dollie Kennard, Mr. Maruice Lawbert, Mr. & Mrs. G. B. Len- | nox. Mrs. Adam Lee. Mr. & Mrs. Tam^s W. Moss, Dr. & Mrs. A. M. McMillan, Mr. & Mrs. Florentine Pinkston, Mr. Aaron McMillian, Jr., Mr. Bass Maharajah, Mrs. Irma Nelson, Mrs. Dorothy Mac kay, Mr. & Mrs. L. L. McVey, Mrs. Gertrude Lucas. Mrs. Troy McCarthy. Mr. Basdec Maharay. Mrs. Irene Morton. Mrs. Margret Dallas Moore, Dr. & Mrs. A. B. Pittman, Mrs. Mildred Pierce, Mrs. Parthenia Perkins, Mrs. Jamie Norman, Mrs. Bemva Pee bles. Mrs. Ethelmarie Price, Miss Betty Patrick. Mrs. Isabel Po well, Mr. Lynnwood Parker, Mrs Eva Ray, Mr. Russell Reese, Mr. & Mrs. Richard Reynolds, Mrs. Robert Rucker, Miss Rami Ram din, Mrs. James G. Robinson, Mrs. Marie Robinson, Rex. E. F. Rid ley, Mr. Eugene Skinner, Mr. John Sims, Mr. John Smith, Rev. & Mrs. David St. Clair, Mr. & Mrs. Theseus Standifer, Rev. Shirley G. Sanchez. Mr. Marion M. Taylor, Mr. Francis Thomas, Mrs. Henry Thomas, Mrs. Adele Thompson, Mrs. Elise Turner, Mr. Lonnie Thomas, Miss Mae Taylor, Dr. Price Terrell, Mrs. Florence Terrell, Mr. Charles Thornton, Mr. Terry Taylor, Mr. & Mrs. John Voner, Dr. & Mrs. Herbert Wiggins, Mrs. Lillian Wagner, Mrs. John A. Williams, Mrs. Jessica Wright, Rev. & Mrs. F. C. Williams. Miss Wash ington. Atty. Ray Williams, Mrs. Dezora Waldron, Mr. Henry Webbsfer, Mr. & Mrs. Leroy Wright. Mrs. B. M. Waddle. Mr. & Mrs. Shirley Yancey. Mr. B. Zorinsky. Anyone desiring to become a , natron plaese contact Mrs. Rob bie T. Davis. WE 2864 or any other member of the Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority. .— The Waiters Column BY H. W. SMITH Mr. Frank Hughes is doing the honors at the Highland Club. Waiters at the Blackstone Hotel are on the up and go on service. Mr. Ed Lee and H. Smith had a friendly visit in the pool hall. Regis Hotel and White Inn Waiters are going good. Waitters Key Club extends at all times a welcome to all friends. Country Clubs are going the limit on service. Blackstone Hotel Waiters are quick stepping on fine service. Fontenelle Hotel Waiters are in the front line on service. Legion Club Waiters are very busy this week as the State Meet ing was well underway the first of the week, Omaha Club Walters with Capt Earl Jones are taking very good care of the service to all members and their friends. This Week BY H. W. SMITH Gov. Dewey of N. Y. was in Nebr. July 26 enroute to Michigan. Stewart D. Farmer of Canton, Minn, was fatally injured Thurs day night. July 24 in rescueing his 4 year old daughter from a stalled car on a R. R. crossing, j Ex Congressman J. Day was ! sentenced to a term of from 9 months to 2 years in prison for taking a bribe of $53,634.07 when he was chairman of the house military affairs committee during World War 11. The two men ac cused of giving the bribe were al so sentenced to prison. U. S. Senator Bilbo will undergo two plastic surgery operations in the near future to replace por tions of his jaw that were removed to eradicate a cancer. Mr. Geo. h^pckey of Hot Springs New Mexico hooked a two pound five ounce bass on July 23 which had a tag attached to it identify ing it as one of the 20 basses that was worth one thousand dollars and was released in the Hot Springs Sporting Club's 55 thou sand dollar fish derby. The others are still in the lake. Read the Omaha Guide for all the news of the race. The Republican U. S. Senators conceded defeat in the demand for an investigation in K. C. elec tion fraud by U. S. Attorney Gen eral Clark. Byron Appley, an aviator of Oakland, Nebr.. saved a pot of rice in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Geo Cady. He hopped in his plane and flew to their home near De catur, Nebr. and turned off the gas under a pot of Jice,.. U. S. Congress ^votes to end credit control November 1, 1947. !. ’C) CROSSWORD PUZZLeQ I J”***w,-_- - - - r*g~g'- - ■ Horizontal 1 Supremely complacent 5 Chinese dele gate to Secur ity Council 8 Magnificence 12 Intense aversion 13 Container 14 Source of medicinal oil 15 Crude metal 16 .German philosopher 18 The self 19 Bone 20 Great Italian actress 21 Provided 23 French conjunction 24 To visit intrusively 26 Girl’s name 28 Musical direction 29 Lair 30 Iranian amb. to U. S. 32 Ancient Gre cian country 33 Rower 34 Arabian garments 35 Archaic: old times 36 game at marbles 37 Article in a party’s platform 38 Laborer un der the feudal system 40 Lure 41 Symbol for tantalum 43 Greek “M” 44 Golf stroke 45 To exist 47 Snake allied to the adder 49 So. American republic 51 Sward 52 Louis XVIII’s ambassador to London and Berlin 55 Colloquial: a printer 56 Worm 57 He attacked the Russian fleet at Port Arthur _ Solntlao In Next t»m. __ No. 7 Vertical *1 Exclamation used to fright en fowls 2 Special U. S. envoy to China 3 Shoshonean Indian 4 Earth godd’s 5 Chivalrous enterprise 6 To solicit earnestly 7 Numeral 8 River in Italy 9 Poem 10 He gave the Pacific its name 11 Conspiracy 16 1943 tennis singles champion 17 Legal claim 20 Customary fees 22 Note of scale 25 Sour sub stances 26 By means of 27 Moroccan capital 28 Mound 29 Archaic: simpleton 31 To inquire 33 Dolt 34 Dismounted 36 Respite 37 Latin for “father” 39 Printer's measure 40 Subterranean buds 41 Sensitive mental Derception 42 Pale 44 —ia created the 1st Amer ican cardinal ! 45 World War II ace 46 Root of the taro 48 Soft food 50 “Scots, what —wl' Wallace bled” ,• 51 —Miguel, largest of the Azores 53 Toward 54 Neuter pronoun Answer to Pnzile Number • ** I Series H47 Chief of Police Munch says no federal employee is exempted from a tickt in the traffic viola tions. A Jewish refuge ship was near ing Palestine with 4,500 illegal immigrants and it was also learn ed that the British planned to impose Martial Law on all Jews in he Holy Land. Leonard Buson fell from the top of the South Omaha River Bridge to the floor 50 feet. Doc tors Hospital reported his condi tion was satisfactor. A four foot tomestone in a ceme tary fell on a :wo years old girl on July 23. She was smoothered to death. Her father had just gone across the street to cut grass in another cemetary. CLASSIFIED AD MRS. ICESOLONA McSWAINE is operating the Powder Puff Beauty Salon 1408 North 24th st. Telephone JA 0265. Resi dence AT 0392. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Wash ing machines, irons, all types fans liberal trade-in allowance for your radio or consoles with with record players and EM. Up to 15 months to pay. ’ ALLIED APPLIANCE CO. 205 So. 18th Street mue at wedding The wearing of something blue at the wedding was ancient Israelite custom which suggested a blue rib bon for the bride—blue being the col or of puritv. love and fidelity. THERE I WAS, DRIVIN' TH' STAGECOACH THROUGH DEAD MANS GULCH, AND WILD INJUNS SHOOTIN’ AT ME.../W Don’t overload your electric circuits. When you build or modernize provide ADEQUATE WIRING. NEBRASKA-IOWA ELECTRICAL COUNCIL —MARY’S... CHICKEN wtt • BARBECUED RIBS & SOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN “OUR Chicken Dinners Are Something to Crow About ” . ROBERT JONES, PROPRIETOR 8946. 2722 North 30th St. .mron.iMiiti .'I,I..,..,,III,,, * Neighborhood Furnace Co. 2511 Charles Street -GUTTERING SPOUTING & REPAIRS_ INSTALLATION OF OIL, GA6, COAL, also STOKERS ESTIMATES FREE * m_7p