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About The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19?? | View Entire Issue (Jan. 3, 1948)
Calling Mrs. Veterinarian Women members of the veteri nary profession are forming a new national organization of their own. All women who are graduates of recognized veterinary colleges are eligible for membership, whether or net they are still acfc'-'e vj animal health practices. Composition of Coffee The organic composition of all coffee s exceedingly complex and 5 contains constituents from many K groups—fats, oils, waxes, proteins, carbohydrates and others. Probably ® the most characteristic is the active j? j principle caffeine, or trimethyl xan- ti , thin. g -„ «(« r-nmnmnii ■ ■!■■■! ■■■■!■ i mm— — MARY’S — CHICKEN HUT BARBECUED RIBS and , SOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN I “OUR Chicken Dinners Are 4 Something -Jo Crow About.” ROBERT JONES, Proprietor JAckson 8946 2722 North 30th St. THRIFTY LIQUOR STORE 1 .• WINES, BEER, LIQUORS | “We Appreciate Your Trade” § *4th & LAKE AT. 4248 : B fcr /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. IHHHHI HI I WILL MAKE PERSONAL APPEARANCE TOUR IPS Photo Exclusive to Ted Yates Publications * It Is an established fact that Louise Beavers (above) is an outstanding • star of stage and screen. Her performance in the screen attraction S “Imitation Of Life" (in which another sepia favorite—Miss Fred! WasT. h ington, now theatrical editor of the newspaper PV—also portrays a » major role) is superb. Playing to record-breaking crowds, the film has \ been banned in the Deep South, where according to “Southern tradition" k democracy is not at work. However, Miss Beavers, beloved by all, by f popular demand will soon make a personal appearance tour. Joe Glaser, 5j under whose direction the star has climbed to the top, in an exclusive K interview revealed that he will positively accept bookings for this $ stellar attraction below the Mason-Dixon Line as well as in other sec- $ «iins Lhroiinhout the country. Men like Glaser are real Americans. ! I By r. MELVIN 1 | HERE COMES » BREEZY./ WATCH ME MAKE HIM ANOTHER „ CASANOVA// Breezy you're madI AE50UT /0\E !f YOU WANT TO SWEEPlz^r ME OFF MY FEET//)j^ • > Y-YE6>„ Z-O (GrLAPYg.<9 ►HUH/ IT DIDN'T WORK/J [HA/LOOK.^ O.QQK AT HIM RUN YOUR (h^plbte^TT— ^ ^^&%^*'2corc>i)5& \ M ^ <! g^g j | JIM STEELE By MELVIN TAPLEY HUN6RyMEN' A£ED JIMS. THE OTHEK WITH HIS RRE,NAGA<SGOOP EDUP^QMEOPTHE , c(^y5TAalZEPN^TO., HE ORDERED HUNGRY TDPRDPTHE6UNOR HE'DDiaDPTHKE bcho^ve crystal STARlNGrAJTH& ‘ 'DIAMONDS OF PtW WEBO^HODTS TO H£ HENCHMAN—// comwmnM. hO?CAREFUL.^ ha /THE HUNGRY/PROP; BAAS vourrifl&M shakes QUICKWITH \ W)-*V k i, vt*”’ wevegottheirWvwhy WEAPONS,N'AGA/F POTHER. ^ YOU CAN PUT f AUTHORITIES?! I NOW7... THE VILLAGE J AUTHORITIES PEOPLE..VP WILL BE HERE § . ^ortls- - tfwE HAVE PARTY PLANNED^ m FCRTHE'£AA5 AND gULL-I if NECK- WHY SHOULD, >g A AUTHORITIES UAvpaw ^ BRiEZT I «y r. melvin £ IF YOU WAKINA CATCH m koMETHK BREEZY-YA Jg 60TTA U$E BAIT IN YOURjg 'RAP THAT THEYj^i^f JIM STEELE By MELVIN TAPLEY cemuttmM. ll b|otDlM6'A W-POILOFNITRO' CRYSTALS, N'A£A DlSAGttS'HON&g/V JIM TELLS HIM THAT THE AUTHORITIES Will SCCN ARRIVE ID JAIL ^U66ESTS,fCWEYER, Tf&TW£FVILS*ft ItHEYiuA^.ruey 'HAVB PARTY HANNEC -THERE'S EN0U6H SKIRMISHING-IN W THE WORLD AS IT ft IS... I AGREE WITH m THAT THE LAW SEEMS TO MOVE 7 VERY SLOWLY AND f THAT THESE GUYS IghiPIEE PUNISHED-. I BUT LET US BE TOLERANT PURI NO THIS gRIEF SEASON 1 AT LEAST...LETS HOPE FOR M tzkcz cm /m mm N1 twzamMf JttX ,, £y | RUSSIAN'CllEEN — I MAY NOT OWN LAND j MAY NOT BE TRIED BY A JURY [ MAY NOT CHOOSE HIS OWN JOB ! MAY NOT ABSENT HIMSELF FROM WORK r MAY NOT STRIKE j MAY AWT PICKET s MAY NOT EMPLOY LABOR ! MAY NOT TRAVEL « J | MAY NOT OWN JEWELRY / : MAY NOT RING A CHURCH BELL [ MAY NOT BE FRIENDS WITH A FOREIGNER V ! -AND IS FORBIDDEN FREEDOM |j r OF SPEECH-FREEDOM OF ASSEMBLY- \\ ; FREEDOM OF REUGION Ate FREEDOM h OFSOUL ~ I Released, by pen. - .. belt Ripley, for reprinting for educational purposes. fj I l l This great Ripley cartoon shows the pitifnl plight of the common S f man, as divested of all rights, and property, under that vicious form of 3 | organized larceny which is Communism. Therein a cruelly disciplined | ; minute minority is forced to enslave the energies of the greater mass a t of productive people. There government, so-called, owns everything.« f But government cannot invent—cannot create. It can only consume,*' : To invent is solely the function of the individual. With the people’s® j incentives suppressed—and with ruling gangsters satiated with loot— S | there can be no mounting surge of invention, as has made and kepi £ ■ America great and her people free. “Working from behind her iroi ® i curtain,” says American Fair Trade Council. “Russia strives to reduct 5 | to her level the unshackled peoples of the world, first by destroying £ ■ their national obstructions to commercial piracies. Through misguidei ® Americans, she labors now to break down our Fair Trade Laws, ou' g ; Trade-Mark Laws, our Patent Laws—and all our great network of pro £ ! tective laws which provide, for our people, compelling incentive to creat ® and produce—to make and keep our Nation strong.” ^ Pick Right Knife Whether a knife is sharp and stays sharp depends on the quality of the steel blade, the grinding of the blade and the way it is tem pered. The finest blades are forged and thus are strong, flexible and easy to grind. Ancient Cities Lost ^ The archeological Investigations of 8 recent years support the theory that w the ancient cities of western Asia, 8 which once stood in the midst of $ flourishing agricultural regions, 8 were abandoned as the result of pro $ gressive erosion and soil exhaustion 8 8 i Furniture Fashions Aim worth j jjj K mini .....—" ii-i.im—IN — p GRAND RaPIDS MICHIGAN —Thu new living room grouping ft i kv VuelUr drtmamet the utility, versatility and decorative appeal of g f fire modem fumushings Center of interest is the highly functional B 5 eorner table flanked by four upholstered units, which are comfor. it- R \ self is shown Or they may be used separately or assembled at a g I airs'# full-length i"fa Fnd pieces (with arms) sre in plain fabric. « s seven'll#tad »*♦> ve'anca* af the same printed, material the »e*t— al R l •' a The “Camel” Method By GEORGE S.BENSON ^fcssidsnt of Harding Collcya Ssarey, Arkansas I s 8 I ME 5 ONCE THE CAMEL gets his 2 head into the tent, he soon has * his entire body inside. This old 5 saw lends itself to some modern k applications, but it fits none bet ? ter than the current English situ g ation. Socialism is indeed like the « camel; it does not stop at part * of-the-way measures. To put it g into a good old Southern expres 5 sion, it’s simply “whole hawg or 8 nuthin.” 1 A striking feature of the Brit 5 ish “Crisis Bill” which recently S became law in that country, was 2 a clause giving government the K authority to take possession of S any industry which it might pro 2 nounce inefficiently managed. Ac K tually, what this means is that JE no industry in England is safe :from government confiscation. K The threat will always be pres S ent, for the excuse of “inefficien 2 cy” could be trumped up at any K time. | Invading FOR FIVE YEARS I g The Tent have contended, in this column and in public K addresses, that no country could g operate successfully with a “half f3nd-half” economy. If it’s part ly government managed and part | ly private enterprise, pretty soon E Socialistic schemes find excuse to g invade and take over. The pres i ent English government is prov 5 ing my contention. It’s the old 2 “camel” process. x England is a country that long < has been known for devotion to 5 the freedom of individuals. Yet, x within two years after she start < ed her program of nationalizing ! major industries, it was found ; necessary to pass a law giving the l govc. mt power to seize any | industry it may choose on theex ? - cuse of “inefficiency.” There's a « lot of leeway there. An industry g might be inefficiently • managed S from the viewpoint of produc- * tion, or even from the viewpoint g of non-cooperation with the gov- g ernment. 2 Control ANOTHER striking | The Beast feature of the Crisis v Bill, as reported by Associated Press, was that, it ££ gave the government power to v tell both men and women where ^ to work and what to do. This in- « eludes women -from 18 to 40 6 years of age who have no children ^ under 16, and men from 18 to 50 « years of age. This loss of free- i dom of individuals has been un- ^ thought of heretofore in English k speaking countries. g It is my earnest conviction that £ England avoided this conscrip- js tion of her .industry and her peo- 3 pie just as long as possible. These £ steps must have been taken ro- t luctantly, for she long hascham- 3 pioned all the freedoms that we £ hold dear. There is only one con- I elusion to be drawn: these dan- 3 gerous and drastic steps cannot £ be avoided under a government 1 managed economy. Once the S camel’s head is in, there’s no £ keeping him out of the tent. Every free American must take i this as warning. If we want free- j dom to work at the job we choose, where we choose, and to bargain for our wages—then we do not want a government man aged economy. If we want the right to own property and to op erate a business for what profit 1 there is in it, then we must stay t hy of government managed econ omy. The British experience tells the story. Origin of Softball ( Softball is an outgrowth of the f games of indoor baseball, play c ground ball, kitten ball and dia ! mond ball. Since 1909 it became so ( popular that by 1935 a world series [ was played in Chicago. Outlawed Scotch Plaids There was a time when Scotch plaids were as politically significant as the swastika or the hammer and sickle—and the English law prohibiting use of the plaids wasn’t repealed until 1782. j : —-— * Yesterday’s Leftovers Can Be j Turned Into Today’s Triumphs I IT’S no harder to s jrve the man of the house a goc ) dinner with I a cheerful smile, ev n if food re strictions are irritati ^ and the left overs from yesterdai t>ok unattrac tive, than it is to ^h up some warmed-over scrapt fith tearful j apologies. Just tuck iway a few clever make-over k/ ,<s in ytrnr memory and the pro# Im’s solved. One thing to rem* toer is that *ou can always brigk ti up made ever dishes with vegek/1>les that are really delicious. You will be sure of • immer-fresh deliciousness if you use quick-frozen vegetables. They • -e time savers, too, for they are *>il ready to cook in less time than ,ie ordinary sort. And such stand bys as quick-frozen French-style green beans, golden sweet corn, thick-leaved spinach and many others are on special sale from time to time. French-style green beans, for in stance, will transform a little left over rice into a really important dish. Cooked rice and vegetables, as Indeed the Chinese discovered gen erations ago, can always be blended into a really distinctive culinary triumph. Or if you have a small amount of cooked meat or fish on hand, serve it creamed in a spinach ring—made in a jiffy from the quick frozen vegetable. Green Beans and Rice 1 box (10 oz.) quick-frozen Flench-style gTeen beans 1 cup boiling water, salted 1/2 cup finely diced onion i 2/S cup finely diced celery 1/3 cup diced green peppers 2 tablespoons butter 1-1/2 cups canned or stewed toma* toes | 1/4 teaspoon celery salt, If de- 1 sired 1-1/4 cups cooked rice Salt and pepper Drop frozen green beans Into briskly salted water, bring again ta a boil, and boil 8 to 12 minutes, or until Just tender. Drain. Sautd onion, green pepper, and celery in butter, covered, until tender but not brown ed. Add remaining ingredients and simmer'about 5 minutes. Makes six servings. Spinach Ring 1 box (14 oz.) quick-frozen spinach 1 cup boiling water, salted Dash of pepper 1/2 teaspoon salt 3/4 teaspoon minced onion 2 tablespoons melted butter 1 egg, slightly beaten Drop frozen spinach Into briskly boiling salted water. Bring again to a boil and boil 4 to 6 minutes, or until just tender, separating leaves with fork during cooking. Drain and chop. Add aeasonings, butter, and egg and mix very thoroughly. Turn into well-greased small ring mold. Place in pan of hot water and bake in moderate oven (375°F.) 30 min utes, or until firm. Unmold. Fill center with creamed mushrooms oi fish Makes six servines. .. . _ II nil. .-ir-r..1 To a homemaker, there is nothing as wonderful as a well planned kitchen. This kitchen is remarkable for its efficiency, convenience and step-saving arrangement. To make it a cook’s delight it has all the proper accouterments for preparing nourishing, well-balanced meals, and aside from its functional and utilitarian services it include* a home-like atmosphere in its color scheme. The walls are warm yellow, the floor and table top covering are flecked, grey and black. The interesting window shade that covers the three-in-one window is grey with painted design of a gay white cage and yellow bird. Th* curtains are ydlow with a grey and green trim. The cabinets, imi and stove are sparkling kitchen-white. _, ______ I We A Once More T A"MnERING CURTAINS * VO OR BRING THEM IN Edholrn & Sherman .flDERERS & DRY CLEANERS— 24C» x^orth 24th St._Phone WE-6055 To every one | 'Hearty Greetings and Warmest wishes for E I the New Year j Andrews Quick Service 1 Cleaners l S 1837 North 24th Street Telephone JAckson 4117 Contractor See Bailey First SPECIALIZING IN PATCH WORK. PLASTERING 9 BRICKLAYING CHIMNEYS AND CONCRETEING9 9 RET-AINING WALLS f OFFICE_2209 NO. 22ND S —Phone-PLeasent 19 7 5 —