The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, October 11, 1947, Page Eight, Image 8

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    r jim <T6et.e »r MimMumr
r oats'so now j we've ear
I, WE'RE-ALL ^TOTOMCUC
(: LOCKED up./ ^ PLANS# WE
/ RAL-NEO' WHAT DO WE \<30 ALON&
LOOBfeMEW pO NCW-YELLf &ULONE f
UNFAIR. LA20R J THIN& 19 1
SMALL BUILDING/ 't TACTICS 2 CERTAIN I
me workers
lyi
By T. MELVIN
breezy
(vry, irnK i IKE A GOOD 21 % A PIGSKIN ?- &EE /
FwmtAWj;ccwm.i i think ijC^TYmi
MS® BBSSISk^
;TAN TOPICS By CHARLES ALLEN
ooNTiijewr.u ■ ■> A\uy.F-g „ . . _.
“Why not try the large economy size?”
Original Alloy
Prehistoric ornaments of plati
num hammered over gold were
found in the "grave* offthe priests
and kings of the ancient Indian in
habitants . of Colombia This was
probably the original idea of com
bining the two rare metals to obtain
the two-tone color effect for jewelry.
Alloy .la Strong
The green color of emeralds is j
due to small quantities of chromium
In the jewels. When this same
chromium is added to steel along
with nickel, the resultant alloy is .a
hard, strong, we ay-resistant metal,
nickel-chrome steel, often used in
gears and axles.
Industrial Uses
MUk is used in a wide variety of
industrial products such as plastics,
textiles, paper coating, paint, glue,
films, pharmaceuticals, insulation,
fertilizer, insecticides, penicillin,
plaster, dyes, animal feed, preserva
tives. explosives, electroplates
t Secret of Pie Cutting
To cut pie easily sprinkle granu
lated sugar over the mermgoe
topped pie. __
neavy raisers
Latest statistics show that tha
United State* has more than 22 tele
phones for every lOQ inhabitants,
compared ti* 2.2 telephones per 100
Inhabitants in tha 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 with 1,290,000 in all of South
America.
Handle Legs Promptly
Ttntyfer c*t during the growing
tweoa requires prompt handling to
a*wid deterioration from decay, in
sect attache or sap stains, exten
sion foreehhs 'report
Gives A Lift
To give a lift to canned or cooked
dried fruit, squeeze orange or
grapefruit juice over the top just be
fore serving.
Ideal Bog Size
Moderately fat hogs, weighing be
tween 190 and 240 pounds alive, *pr».
duce hams, shoulders and sides ol
the npost desirable size for curing.
I
Your childiffct should be encouraged to entertain ai
home. After you’ve met these guests, do leave the young
people to themselves.
i .
Next Door* Jy ted shearer
, 4 •
R 11
“.... So I was jus’ wonderin’ if yon could manage to
support her for about tthd next ten years_!”
I THEY’LL NEVER ME +
INTEUISCNCE AND GREAT «
COURAGE MARK THE LIFE OF N
SCOROC W- MOWN* BORN §
T9 YEARS AGO,IN N-C* A FINE R
(tawssmsiiffff-s*, *
there but Was quickly
FORCED OUT8Y BIGOTED AND Jl
tealodb workers it .35
i-Wenttobal
• AND FOUND A .cjjfc
_ AN IHDmEER IN
OF TAC EUROPEAN
THE LA^’^AM^M^T5* ;
SHARK FACILITIES TOR COLORED ■*
PERSON® IN THAT CITY, GEORGE .
BROWN AND WALTER LIAM®LEY '
rare^
FEWNYiJES (DOWN THE CHESA- .
PEAKE BAY/FWOM BALTIMORE*
. THEY ACQUIRED A STEAM- »
Boat capable or carrying '
1000 PERSONS and RAN
REGULAR EXCURSIONS IN ‘
SEASON• GEORGE BROWN WAS
A SUCCESSFUL PIONEER IN HE
‘ ,nEUS''
6,Sbown
ENGINEER AND
STEAMBOAT CAPTAIN
Continental Feotrr~«
final preparations for
COMMUNITY CHEST
drive mapped
Division workers’ meetings to make
final preparations for Omaha’s twenty
fifth annual Community Chest cam
paign are being Veld this week. The
drive wil open on October 19 and
continue through November 6 in be
half of thiry-ane local health and
welfare agencies.
Some 4,000 volunteers wil take an
ac|ive part in the solicitation, ac
cording to Edward G. Hinton, general I
campaign chairman.
Workers in the national firms divi
I sion were to be the guests of the
I John Deere Plow Company at an or
ganization meeting Thursday noon,
Joh Clapper, chairman, presiding.
A similar meeting was held Tuts
day when majors of the employes'
division were the guests of the Rob
erts Dairy Company. John Rosen
I blatt, chairman, was in Chicago.
Principal address was given by
Fia'ik P. Fogarty, an associate chair
man in the drive.
.
t “The dollar wil go farther through
Community Chest channels to help
Omahas than it wilL \hrough any
other means yet devised," Mr. Fog
arty said. “Go back twenty-five years
before Omaha had a Community
Chest, Thirty-one times a year the
agencies would organize and have
their own campaigns, it was a joke
and took a great deal of time. Now,
the agencies spent all of their time
doing the job for which they were
lured."
The Chest goal is $820,639, about
! 6 per cent more than the amount
* raised In the annual drive last year.
“Everything the Chest dollar does
costs more this year,” Mr. Fogarty
said. “Groceries, medicines, rent,
clothing, coal and repairs are up.
The Chest budget is higher because
your family and business budgets are
higher.”
The associate chairman pointed out
that Omaha's need as served by the
Chest agencies are as great as ever.
Some problems, he said, are more
acute than last year.
R. A. Hayes, president of the
Omaha and Council Bluffs City In
dithrial Council, CIO, pointed out
that it will take the “combined ef
forts of all of us.”
"Our organization stands ready io
help,” Mr. Hayes said. “Workers
have the Chest at heart and realize
it is for Omaha's good.”
Mr. Hayes is a member of the
Chest’s board of governors and bud
get committee. He urged the employ
es’ df/ision majors to ajrrange as
many workers’ meetings as possible
to afford the opportunity to hear e
speaker in behalf of the drive.
Sectional chairmen in the employ
•s’ division were introduced. They
are: R. W. Dillen, Jacob Bercovici,
Myron Westcott, Fred L. Miller, Ker
mit Hansen, Allen T. Hupp, Ben J.
Stiefler, Fred F. Ebener. Thomas F.
Hanley, John Diesing, Harold Sod
erlund.
SOUTH'S WHITE CHURCHMEN
FIGHT RACISM
CHICAG O— Ciiing militant action
of Georgia churchmen against racism
in even that state, Christian Relations
Committee Director John H. Marion
announces in October Negro Digest
that Southern white clergymen have
begun open warfare on local bigotry.
Gene Tajmadge'e home state of
Georgia, Marion who is a white Pres- '
byterian from Richmond' states, has
taken the lead recently. Joseph A.
Rabun, Talmadge's own pastor, made
news and history when he openly de-i
clared from his pulpit that “We must
fight race hate with aH our power!”
“Rabun’s fiery challenge to his fel- ,
low Baptists has since b** echoed j
from scores of whit Wergymen be
low the Mason-Dixon Line,” Marion
continues. “Even the Ku Klux Klan
has felt the impact of this fight.”
The recently vetoed white primary
bill in Georgia by Governor Melvin
Thompson is another triumph for
"Cracker State” clerics, Marion de
clares. Most hopeful sign is that more
and more white laymen are lending
their active support to the fight their
pastors are making for racial under
sending and cooperation to the
Soutfi. «- „ |
—
BtodkiMuyThwi
Iron ore is'bandied five tiroes j
item the time it is removed from j
the earth until it emerges from the '
fhrnaee as liquid metal
Ouiy Huguenot Church *
Only Huguenot churqh in Amer
ica ie at Charleston. S.' C. It was
founded tn-tJ687.
► The Greeks
> Never had
a Word
* for This!
★
NOV.
3 to 8
OMAHA CITY AUOITO«IUM •
Legal Notices
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
DOUGLAS COUNTY, NEBRASKA
Doc. 404 No. 185
ORDER
LUCILLE L. RYAN, Plaintiff, vs.
EARLE L. RYAN, Defendant.
This matter came on to be heard on
this 24th day of September, 1947, upon
the motion and affidavit of the plain
tiff for leave to procure service of pro
cess upon the defendant herein by
publication, and it appearing to the
satisfaction of the court from the af
fidavit of the plaintiff, that the plain
tiff does not know the address or resi
dence of the defendant and has not
been able to ascertain either, after
reasonable and due inquiry and dili
gent search continued for three months
after the filing of the plaintiff’s peti
tion.
It is therefore ordered that notice of
the pendency of this action shall be
given to the defendant by publication
in a legal newspaper in Douglas
i County, Nebraska, for four successive
weeks.
BY The Court
Judge James M. Fitzgerald
District Judge
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
DOUGUAS COUNTY, NEBRASKA
Doc. 404 No. 185
AFFIDAVIT
LUCILLE L. RYAN, Plaintiff, vs
EARLE L. RYAN, Defendant.
STATE OF NEBRASKA)
) w
COUNTY OF DOUGLAS)
Harold L. Hunt, being first duly
sworn upon oath, deposes and says
that he is the attorney for the plaintiff
herein; that the plaintiff filed her
petition on the 24th day pf March 1947,
hgainst Earle L. Ryan the defendant
herein, the object and prayer of which
is to secure an annullment of a mar
riage from the defendant; affiant fur
ther states that the plaintiff does not
know the whereabouts, address or re
sidence of the defendant and has not
been able to ascertain either, after rea
sonable and due inquiry and diligent
search, continued for more than three
months after the filing of the plain
tiffs petition.
WHEREFORE plantiff prays for an
order for service upon the defendant
I by publication.
Subscribed and sworn to before
j me, a Notary Public, in and for Dou
glas County, Nebraska, on ’.nis 24th
day of September. 1947.
RJpk R. Bremer
Notary Pubblic
4t—Beg. 9-27-47 End. 10-18-47
CHURCHES CELEBRATE
WORLD-WIDE COMMUNION
Earnest congregations assembled in
greater numbers in Omaha churches
last Sunday for World Wide Com
munion, reported the Rev. W. Bruce
Hadley, executive secretary of the
Omaha Council of Churches, com
menting on reports which have come
into his office. In thrity-eight church
es reporting attendance on both Sep
tember 28 and October 5, the increase
four'^en pt^ri^it the second
Sunday. Total attendance in forty
four reporting attendance on October
5 was 11,138.
World Wide Communion Sunday
was observed this year for its eighth
consecutive year in Protestant church,
es, and marked the first Sunday in a
church attendance crusade in which
fifty-two Omaha churches are joining
in October and November. The church
attendance crusade is national plan
developed by the co-operating major
denominations, and has been approv
ed unanimously bv the denominational
secretaries of evangelism represented
in the Department of Evangelism of
the Federal Council of Churches.
Pastor E. W. Norling of the Bethel
Lutheran Church reported the largest
number of communicants last Sunday
morning in the history of the church.
Over a thousand people participat
ed in the service at First Presbyter
ian Church.
Laid of jgaarten
■Afcrica t§ the land of quarters. One
quarter of its area Is forest and
btuUaud, one quarter Is grass land.
I one quarter is desert and the re
! m&kdtig quarter is Motivated. World
; Book pnsvolsnpdia Hicnlnc^r
! ~-1
i “0ldat40,50,60?” i
, — Man, YouVe 6razj
S“£* iS1™ and nun call "old" Tr»
i-«^?S8w©.-%£awwjmwc
M all drug stores ererj-wbere.. Id
Omaha. at WALGREEN and SMITH
STORES.
.'OPPORTUNITY MAGAZINE!
V
25th Anniversary Issue
Get your copy at JOHNSON’S DRUGS j
BUDDY’S NEWS STAND or
THE URBAN LEAGUE
Roofing — Siding — Inflation
’ Guttering
OLD ESTABLISHED LINES
Free Estimates
F. H. A. TERMS
T. C. Snow KE 6930
Classified x Is w nesuits
FOREIGN JOBS Men Women gov.
and private listings, hundreds skill
de classifications. 16-pages accur..
ate information $1.00, postpaid...
Satisfaction guaranteed.FOREIGN
JOBS. INC.. Baltimore 1, Maryld.
—■ ■
C.UIIULH * IHGRHAN
♦401 korik S4th at Wh mu
PICK THESE AND YOU CAN’T
GO WRONG: Kingsblood Royal
The Vixens. Color Blind, Black
Boy. Also Oscar Micheaux’s
books.
WANTED TO RENT man and j
wife with two children wants j
to rent a house or an apt. call
AT. 2858.
WANTED: THE OMAHA GUIDE
desires th6 service of two alert,
energic, and conscious men or
women with cars that desire to
earn additional spending money
during your spare time.
STOUT MAN for all around work in
junk yard. Steady job for reliable
married man. Apply; Open Sundays
CAPITAL RAG and METAL CO.
4th. Pierce Sts.
FOR SALE Furbinater Hair Dyrcr- !
$50.00 Call AT. 4360. i
MARY’S CHICKEN HUT, 2722 N..
CHICKEN DINNER8
30th St., JA. 8946. Our Chicken*
Dinners axe Something to Crow A
bout. Robt. Jones, Propr.
New & Uted Furniture
IDEAL FURNITURE HAK1
*311-13 North 24th— 34th ' -fc
—WEL..JT 2224
LYCAN A RANKIN guaranty
their furnace repairs, call A
5029
Real Estate Loans ,
F. E. WATTERS
234 Brandies Theater
Tel. JA 3393
BRUMBAUGH OF OMAHA
New and USED Books
109 N. 16th St. AT 803?
FOR RENT a nice room for man'
wife or a single man in a
modern home at 2580 Maple at.
WANTED 12 live-wire newsboys
' to sell the Greater Omaha Guide
weedends. Call at the Omaht
Guide 2420 Grant St., and anl
for Mr. Devereaux after schoo
on Thursday and Friday after
noon for full particulars. Hurr]
for only 12 boys will be used.
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
— ■ AakiLAn* 1^._—|4 » V>£ka.* .
S^Horliontal
1 To the
sheltered side
5 Cry of sorrow
JClgtb
measure
12 Lying under
14 Kiwi
15 Heron
16 Intricate
18 Combining
form: eight
2D By birth
21 Symbol for
iron
22 Note of scale
24 To drive in
with light
blows
26 Humid
28 Singula'r
30 To depend
32 To anchor
35 Obligation
37 Sheltered
corner
39 Archaic: your
40 Bay in west
ern Florida
42 Neat
44 Pronoun
45 Shakes
47 Ancient coun
try in Greece
48 Symbol for
silver
51 One-sixth
drachma,
1 53 Binds
56 Of the nature,
of wood
59 Knot of short
hair
60 Hummingbird
61 Manner of
building
63 To soak
64 Biblical
kingdom
! 65 To sprAd for
I drying
Vertical
1 Peer G'ynt’s
mother
2 To haul
| 3 River In
Spain
i 4 To expel
8 Symbol for
actinium
• Limb
7 Soon
8 To shatter j
9 Silkworm
10 To spend time
in idleness
11 Narrow track
13 Perfume
obtained
from flowers
17 To judge
19 Foretokeh
22 To poke
around
23 Girl’s name
25 Small area
of ground
27 Youngster
29 Mute
31 Time long
since past
33 Unit of
electrical
resistance
34 Cereal grass
36 Wooden golf
club
38 Highlander’s
costume
41 Lady superior
of a nunnery
Solution In Next beat.
NO. IS
43 Plant ot
extraordinary
size
48 Archaic:
truth
48 To recite in a
pompous
manner
49 Winglike
50 To proffer
I
52 Enticement
54 European
country
5j5 Winter
vehicle
87 Ship channel
58 “Sighted — „
sank same”
62'Symbol lor
calcium
Answer te Pnule Number IS
••rlM B-41
Meat Packing Industry
The atart of commercial meat
packing In North America can be
traced to 1641 when a square-rigged
ship sailed from Boston harbor with
a cargo which a handful of New
England colonists hoped could be
sold to West Indies plantation own
ers. Capt. John Pynchan. Spring
field, Mass., and a few farmer neigh
bors had consigned hogsheads of
beef and perk, packed in salt, te
England’s colonies.
SCBSCICirTJt Si RATKS
* moxth
• months . ..... sa*
6 months .... 91 **
t tear . .
ooo. n.w
■ YEAR (Out of Tuw,.
r—
WITH TM
DIETRIM PLAN
ftmoll tasteless capsules, easy*
to take. 10 jefher with complete
directions Contains no danger
ous drugs er chemicals.
We Deliver i -
The Vitamin Store *
305 So.. 16di AT 4500
Why Not
HURRY TO 2229 Lake Street for good
eats; such as Beef Stew, Chili,
Hamburgers, Hot Dogs, etc.
Our Foods are Real Gone
Hurry Back Cafe
2229 Lake St JA 9195
Mrs. Ella Mae Tucker, Supervisor
J. Mason and E. Washington, Props;
-MARY’S---—
CHICKED wtt
• BARBECUED RIBS &
SOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN
‘ OUR Chicken Dinners Are
Something to Crow About.”
ROBERT JONES, PROIWIETOR
JA. 8946 2722 North 30th St