The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, September 13, 1947, Image 8

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    ' BREEZY • Prr.m** .j
ftOURE MVIN&\HL I'M HAVIN' AL l SOLUTION,W&ZXfJ
TROUBLE WITH TM£-TWEY7) >I'M 60NNA CROSS ^
WTHOSe PEA^BOP/Jf<EEP ROLUN'Z (PEAS WITH MEXICAN)
beans^
JIM STEELE By 'MELVIN TAPLEY !
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. Next Door” Jh ted shearer
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LEADING
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GAINER’IN
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TUB FIRST COLORED
-JM ALL-AMBRJCAN WAS
•W FRrrz Poulard, of
^y Brown, aJr half in
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• PAUL' ROBESON, OF * -
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» ■■ ■ ■ ' —■■■■■. • III ■ I ■
___I
Lime Essential
Lime is essential on add soils for
proper growth of many crop and
pasture plants. To ppocnote this de
lire d growth, sufficient lime should
be applied to change'the acid condi
tion to a near aeutral point. Under
most conditions in the upland area
the addition of lime to biassed also
provides calcium for plant growth.
Commercial fertilizer, incorporated
with the sell management practices
previously, mentj&ed. is essentia}
for continued high crop produetim.
Every crop harvested for gram,
forage or other use removes pten't
food from the soil. Soils under con
tinuous. cropping systems, eoupled
sritb erosion, lose their plant nu
trients'faster than they ean be re
placed by nature.
&f&fe t» fiadostry
In snore and more industries ruffe
dMntane* ^Ug«e>- Re
dji«pEl» b^ aOrttenfc, with an im
WWftioaM h» :*a«ety, lys* absentee
tapKfco fta Uilt^js^ tocncM^I produc
tidb <ftS$Pg hextra of fetiger loorr
pagpto. are gspowted where mile ia
btgnC nerved between meals «r add
ed to diets
Handled Many Times
Ixon ore Is handled five tlmea
from the time it is removed from
the earth until H emerges from the
tanaee as liquid metaL
Only Huguenot Church
Only Huguenot church in Amer
ica is at Charleston, S. C. It was
founded in 1*87
★ SAY YOU SAW IT IN THE GREATER GUIDE
Patronize Our
Advertisers
tan TOPICS_ By CHARLES ALLEN
I i
Dust off those school books, Junior! Complete your educa
tion so you can contribut to the advancement of the group.
rrftnpoe Ort0B
The universally ef me*'# lpue eg
ertor 4 was demon abated eazfy la
antiquity. Paehjjgibn and sub-re
gion of> t$ejfio b ©Save Toped Its own
dye amoeJr. -It^i. estimRed that
nearly 1.000 different plants, vine*,
shrub* aiji^trees were, at one time
or apetheii; employed ter eatrect
faig dyes. However, r-iy a few of
the srrtmitiae oyOB^su&ivod te an
cient and medieval times.
.American Meat Pecking
Fro® a hum tie beginning 806
rears ago, meat packing has geown
o-becpma or/e of the notice's l»rg*
st industries. Meat packers in fbe
■Jnited States produce more than 3D
Dillon pounds of meat annually.
From five million farina and
ranches in every state the meat |
lackers purchase 12T million cattle,
calves, hogs and sheep to make into
iteaks, roasts, stews, sausage items
Bnd canned meat, as well as utiliz
ing by-products for many pharma
ceutical and manufacturing Hems.
First teed Ml
Agricultural seeds were deal aeM
commercially In tha UuMad Ml
-wm« tea*
LINCOLN UNI. MO.) ADDS
SECOND WILBERFORC5
TEAM TO SCHEDULE
JEFFERSON CITY Me.—Plans
have been completed for the
opening contest of the - Lincoln
University (Mo.) Tigers with tie;
Incorporated Church-sap ported
Wilberforce University team, co
ached by Dwight Fisher, on Sept.
27 in Jefferson Ciey. From all in
dications this game will present
strong opposition for each of the
teams as a season’s opener. Coeah
David Rains and Charles. Rx.
um are sending the squad of about
25 men through preliminary con-,
ditioning drlls daily. They wdl
be joined by Assistant Coach
Charles Hoard witfiln a few days.
Coach Rains, releotant to make
any predictions, seemed gratified
with the showing of those report.
Ing.
” IJ M ■ -—•
RBAO THE OMAHA ftUIOn
motherly mhaviVa ”
A ‘FRIENDLY MONTH-'
September hu been proclaimed
as the month for a re-dication of
our people to “a spirit of friend
liness and hospitality” by our No.
1 Citizen, Mayor Charles Leeman.
More than the usual number of
visitors will be lured to the City
by several events of urpsual civic
interest, so extrardinary opport
unity will be given everyone to
mate these strangers feel wel
come and “at home.”
i Mind you, not in the way that
someone tried to when he told a
stranger, “Well I'm at home and
I wish you were.” Not that way!
Listed among the attractions of
civic interest in the Mayor’s Prj
cliamation were Market Week,
the Free Bridge Celebration to
mark the end of tolls on the Ak
Sar-Ben and South Omaha bridges
and the Rodeo and Live Stock
Show of Ar-Sar-Ben at month's
end.
FINDING WHAT WE EXPECT
Amn became so disqusted with
living in his native city for many
years that he decided to move to
another very far away. While en
route and nearing the new city
he stopped a man to inquire about
the nature dtf the people in the
new place c(6 residence.
The native, upon hearing a long
list of complaints about the citj
Sens of the former home-city,
said with much wisdom: ‘ Well, I
am afraid that youYe going to
•find these new people^ just as sel.
fish and sinful, just as short-sight
ed, as thoae back where you
[ were." ,
Someone has given us this good
advice: “While traveling on Life'*
road brother, Whatever be your
goal. Keep your eye upon the
doughnut—And not Upon the
hole.”
! CITIES DO DIFFER
Some folks will argue with em
phasis that “Human nature i.i
much the same all over the world’,
and, therefore, we will meet the
same kind of people everywhere
After we have agreed with this—
and most of us will, no doubt—
we may want to qualify the state
ment by saying that cities do
differ.
A civic consciousness is much
more apparent in some cities than
in others. The natural pride in a
City’s work varies in intensity.
Most older residents are happy
to tell strangers about outstand
ing industries made famous by
qauntity or quality Or by novelty
or the historical or governmental
background, the points, of special
interest, etc. Some pride is always
possible.
Wise is the man who whfle tra
velling keeps his eyes and ears
open to learn all pos3ible about
the history, accomplishments, tra
ditions and even folklore of a re
gion. “When in Rome, shoot Ro
man candles.’’
All of us are given this invit
ation to Make Omaha Different’’
to charcterize it by a feeling o*
friendliness. Let the heart follow
the hand as we welcome strangers.
THE HOLLYWOOD LOWDOWN
By Sid £
INSIDE BRIEFS!!'!
This is a joke, son! Ida Lupino,
who lives in a colonial house, was
awakened the other midnight by
some gent who pounded on the
door and shouted, ‘‘Any Yankee
soldiers go by here, suh?”—Anna
Naegle, the British star, owns a
tea room in Hollywood called
“Miss Anne’s ” — Warner Bros,
forthcoming screen version of
that great play, “Daddies,'’ will be
titled, “Four Wise Bachelors.”
Alex Gottlieb will produce it, and
Leonard Spiegelgass is preparing
thfc screen play—Who said de
flation!? Mink coat recently mod
eled at a Las Vegas style show
by Gale Robbins, from the “Ever
the Beginning” cast at Warners,
was priced tagged $30,000. It is
the most expensive one ever made
in America—John Payne’s eon
tract wifck 20tkFox has been re
newed fpr another year—This is
another jjoke, son. Dane Clark,
whose latest starrer, “Whiplash,-’
had a lot of fighting scenes in it
fist fights, that is—says that h<*
knows a director who didn’t plaw
a small part in his own picture!
Wra. Holden has been given a
new title by the bobby soxers
since his performance opposite
Joan Caulfield in “Dear Ruth.”
They’re calling him “Star-dusty”
And the same bobby soxers have
another name for sipging cowboys
of the cinema—“S&ddlesore Sin
atras” — Paule Croset, lovely
yo«hg actress now getting her
first big break in a cinema op
posite Douglas Fairbanks in “The
Exile,” is the former RKO stock
player, Rita Corday—Rural note'
Fan letter to Roy Rogers from an
elderly woman *1 the mid«e west
said. “M^y God Mess you and
make oatfe sweeter for Trigger."
Tamm HuTt**thteg * ki a»IUai»
fawn Cm tlnr tsc
U. a. DEPARTMENT OF
AGRICULTURE
Consumers Can Get Mors
for !T€ir Egg Money:
Homemakers and hotel and in
stitutional managers should con
sider egg quality, size, and shell
odor in relation to price when
they buy eggs. These steps, ac
cording to the U. S. Departfhent
*t Agriculture, will help the buyer
obtain the most for his egg
money.
The grade label under which
eggs are sold is the consumer's
guide to quality. It is good prac.
tice to cheqk on the quality by
noting the ’“broken-out appear
ance” of the eggs as they are used
Grade AA and A eggs that have
been kept cool from the time they
were graded will have a firm
white and an upstanding yolk.
These high-quality eggs are
especially desirable for poaching,
frying, and cooking in the shell.
GradeB and Grade C eggs, hav
ing thinner, more spread-out pur
poses. For scrambling and for use
in baking, Grade B eggs are just
as satisfactory as Grade A eggs,
and should cost less. These facts
on buying and using eggs accord,
ing to grade apply whether the
eggs are large or small, and
| whether their shells are white or
! brown,
I
This is the season when sub.
stantial savings can be made in
buying eggs by noting therelative
values in different sizes and grad
es. Supplies of high quality, large
eggs are always short at this sea
son. The demand of many con
sumer3 for large eggs, coupled
with the short supply, usually re
sults in making the price high
as compared with prices for
smaller eggs of equality. Mean,
while, small and medium-size eggs
reach a seasonal peak in supply,
as many pullets begin laying in
the late summer. Consumers who
choose the smaller-size eggs can
profit by unusually good buys
when these conditions prevail. |
Within the same grade, there is
often a wide spread between the
retail prices of small, medium, and
large size.
The smaller eggs within a grade
have the same food value as the
larger eggs, allowing for the dif
ference in weight. Medium eggs
weigh about 12% per cent or one
eighth, less than large eggs, and
samll eggs weigh approximately
25 per cent, or one fourth, less
than large eggs.
VETERANS ADMINISTRATION
—
Effective with payments for the !
month of September, the Vet
erans Aministration will pay a
20 percent increase in pensions
for veterans of the Civil and Span- j
ish.American War and in death j
compensation to their dependants,
Ashley Westtnoreland Lincoln re
i gional manager, reported today.
I
Some 5,650 veterans and 4,750
dependents living in VA’s five
state Branch 8 area, which includ
es Nebraska, will benefit by the
increase that was voted by the
last session of Congress and re
cently signed into law by the
President, Westmoreland said. VA
estimates the increase will total
about $1,450,000 for the first year
in this area and that the cost
will decline rapidly thereafter, he
added.
Tie payments, which will be in.
creased, noW range up to $100 for
Civil War veterans; $40 for their
dependents, $78 for Spanish-Amer
aicn War veterans and $43 for
their dependents, Westmoreland
said. He explained that VA will
make automatic adjustments in
thg amount of each check received
by these veterans and their depen
dents after September 1, and ad
vised them not to write or call
the Lincoln office about their
cases. The records of these vet
erans are not handled in any
Nebraska VA office but are kept
in the VA central office in Wash
ington, D. C.
Automatic increases will be
paid, effective Septan berlln the
minimum allowances received by
the more seriously disabled World
War 11 veterans enrolled in edu
cational and training courses
under government spoasorship,
Ashley Westmoreland, Lincoln re
gional manager of tie Veterans
I
Roofing — Siding — Insulation
' QuftaAhg
OLB ESTABLISHtO LIMBS
Free Estimates
F. A. A. TKftMA
T. C. Snow KE C930
£ Mori—aUX
1 Undivided
4 You.and I
6 Rhythm in
verse
i 11 Whirlpool
13 Eaten away
15 By,
U Pertaining to
a town
18 Colloquial:
mother
19 Term in tag
21 To minister to
22 To give forth
24 Land measure
28 Lively song
28 To employ
i 29 Courage
, 31 Eagle’s neqt
33 Pural ending
1 34 Indigent
36 Female ruffs
38 Symbol for
/ tantalum
10 Heavenly
body *
42 To exalt
> 45 Timber tree
47 Protection
49 Stiffly '
decorous
50 Blemish
52 Slang: person
bearing the
blame tor
,, ethers —
54 Preposition
55 Faroe Islands
windstorm
56 Vague
59 Jaukdaw
$ (Scot.) ,<■**
61 Made
requital for
63 Enthusias
ticalij^
•5 Faction
06 Symbol lor
selenium
67 Organ of
sight
IF*"
' Vertical
1 Eggs
2 Annouffee
fnent
3 Comparative
ending
4 Lamented
5 To oust
, 6 Uninvited
participant
■ olrtloa la Knl baa*.
„ "“**• .. No I,
is wo. u •.,;. , _. . : i
7 Period of
time
8 Accent
9 Man's
> nickname
10 Law: to deed
12 Toward
14 Fruit of the
palm (pb)
17 bolphiclike
fish "
20 Snare
23 Greek letter
24 Exclamation
of approval
lpfO
oofly plant
30 Collbquiak to
carry
32 Sharp cry
35 Tattered
37 Hindu wom
an’s garment
38 Small drum
„39 Slumbering
$41 Outbreak
I 1HBi~
43 Thinly
clinking
44 Printer'3
measure
46 Stop!
48 Bags
51 Former Rus
sian ruler
53 Archaic: you
57 Outfit
58 Archaic: the I
60 Yes
62 Colloquial:
• father 5
64 Compass
point
Answer to Pauls Number 19
Series B-47
Re finishing Cabinets
If the old finish of a metal kitchen
cabinet is not scratched or chipped,
a thorough cleaning to remove any
traces of greasy film, followed by
a light rubbing with very fine sand
paper to dull the gloss of the old
enamel, should be sufficient prepa
ration for refinishing. After wiping
with turpentine or mineral spirits,
apply one or two coats of enamel
undercoater, in accordance With the
manufacturer’s directions on the
can, and finish with a soat of
enamel of the desired tint.
'Sweet Sea’
Th* Amazon river is sometimes
yr.r,--I* >be “sweet sea.”
*. '
Thanks to all Our
Customers and
Friends for
Their Patronage
ONE HORSE
STORE
2815 Grant Street
w • ' *r wta
•fLL BE THROUGH IRONING IN a MINUTE, HONEY.H
Don’t overload your electric circuits. When you "***
build or modernize provide ADEQUATE WIRING.
NEBRASKA-IOWA ELECTRICAL COUNCIL
WHY NOT ?
HORRY TO 2229 Lake Street for good eats; such as Beef Stew
Qiili, Hamburgers, Hot Doge etc.
Our Foods are Real Gone
| 0
Hurry Back Cafe
2229 Lake St JA UK
J. Mason and E. Washington, Props:
Mrs. Mia Mae Tucker, Supervisor
———
CHICKEN m T
• BARBECUED RIBS ft
SOUTHERN FREED ctmncm
“QUR Chicken Dinners Am
Something to Crote Aboml.**
| ROBERT JONES, PROPRIETOR
I JA. 8946 2722 North 30th St. !
IIHIMII ... imwu'M-■•/KjiyuMtw. .!K*\ - no ibimh NinimwiiiMiH'iMaai ,, . . .. »^mrtwtweil—iWfcne 1 l
Neighborhood Furnace Go.
2511 Charlre Street
-GUTTERING SPOUTING £ REPAIRS_
INSTALLATION OF OIL, GAS, COAL, mlm STOKERS
ESTIMATES FitEE A TO—f
| <*£ TERMS ARRANGE* A 1 1919