The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, January 13, 1956, Page Four, Image 4

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    WANTED: Houses, Apartments, and
the Names and Addresses of people
that are looking for a place to stay;
and for people who want to rent an
apartment. Call HA 0800.
FOR RENT. A 1 room kitchenette
In a modern home. Call WE
1466.
FOR RENT: Two 2 room furnished
apartments. Call PL 6028
FOR RENT: Lovely 2-room newly
decorated furnished apartment.
Call PL 6028.
FOR RENT: A very nice 2 large
furnished room apartment. Call
PL 4020.
FOR RENT: A beautiful 6 room
modern unfurnished apartment.
In the Mallenson apartment,
at 21st and Burdette St Call
AT 4114. <_
WANTED TO RENT: A 3 or 4
room unfurnished apartment.
Call JA 7042.
FOR RENT: One 2-room furnished
apartment and one 3-room un
furnished apartment Call HA
0800.
WANTED. WANTED! WANT
ED: We want to rent that
Apartment you have for Rent.
Call HA 0800.
We want to tell that car or truck
yon have to sale. Call HA 0800. *
We want to sell that piece of
furniture you have. for sale.
Call HA 0800.
REMEMBER We are in the Rent
ing and aelling busineee. Give
us e ring. HA *800.
WHAT HAVE YOU TO RENT
OR TO SELL? WE HAVE
RENTERS AND BUYERS
WAITING FOR WHAT YOU
HAVE. GIVE US A RING.
HA 0800.
CALL GROW GLOSS for Hair
appointment. Hair dresses and
oil. 2612 N. 24th. Phone PL
9016.
Do you read the Classified Ad
section of our paper? If you don't,
you are missing something. We
have the following listings, in our
office for your consideration. If
you need furnished houses, four
room apartments, unfurnished, two
rooms apartments, furnished, 3
rooms apartment, furnished or un
furnished.
A double bed and a medium size
room for single man for the sum
of $8.00 a week. If permanent, it
rents for $7.00 per week.
We have a two rooms furnished
apartment in a fine Christian
home.very reasonable rate, all utili
A large bay room In a private
home with bath next door, plenty
paid heat, running water, night
and day. Bus passes by the door
comity! from town, by back door
going to.
FOR ANY ABOVE FURNITURE
AND EQUIPMENT. CALL HArney
0000, OMAHA GUIDE BLDG., 2420
Grant Street Omaha, Nebraska
DON’T FORGET WE HAVE
WHAT YOU WANT.
FOR RENT: 1 3-room furnished
apartment 2 2-room apartments.
1 2-room unfurnished apart
ment. 2 1-room furnished l
partment for working man or
woman. Call Ha. 0800, Omaha
Guide Office.
FOR RENT: 3 modern unfurnished
rooms, all utilities furnished.
Call Ha 0800 before 9:30 a.m. or
after 5:00 p.m.
WANTED: A cook for private home
call Mrs. Pettis, Ha 0323, 404 S.
39th St
FOR SALE: TWO LIKE NEW
TELEVISION COMBINATIONS.
WERE $500.00, NOW $195.00.
EVANS RADIO & TV SERVICE,
2936 N. 24th. PL 9879.
Mrs. Katie Holiday
Mrs Katie. Holiday, 67 years
1608 North 29th Street, passed
away Monday morning January
9th at a local hospital. Mrs.
Holiday had been a resident of
Omaha twelve years and was a
member of Grace Tabernacle
Church. She is survived by three
daughters. Mrs. Katie Watson,
Peoria 111., Mrs. Esther Williams,
San Mateo. Calif.. Mrs. Bertha
Sadler. Omaha, three sons, Mr. A.
J. Holiday Malen, Mo., Mr. A. C.
and E. C. Holiday. Omaha, eight
een grand and twenty seven greal
grand children, one sister, Mra
Maggie Mount, Kensett, Arkansas
and other relatives. Funeral ser
vices will be held two o’clock
Monday afternoon from Grace
Tabernacle Church. 1891 Cumins
Street, with the Rev. M. J.
ford officiating. Burial will be
at Mount Hope Cemetery with
arrangements by Thomas Mon
nary.
BENNETT COLLEGE
PRESIDENT
DR. WILLA B. PLAYER
Dr. Willa B. Player, who was
recently named president of Ben
nett College in Greensboro, N. C.,
succeeding - Dr. David D. Jones,
who retired because of ill health.;
Dr. Player joined the faculty at
Bennett in 1930. She is a native
of Akron, Ohio. —(ANP)
Baldness
Seems To Be
Hereditary
Baldness seems to run in fam
ilies and affects both males and
[females. Many men are bald, es
pecially those advanced in years.
The follicles from which the hair
grows become destroyed. In such j
conditions there is no hope of im- ;
provement. Those who do brain j
work and lead sedentary lives j
! usually become bald earlier than j
those who exercise vigorously and
are more exposed to the open air. |
; We have all seen people who
(lost their hair as a res o' of sick
ness, especially prolonged fevers
such as typhoid, intormittant ma
larial. etc. It is quite common
for the hair to fail out during a
severe illness from any cause.
Nervous conditions often pro
duce baldness. The hair has fre
quently turned snow-white a3
the result of grief, or trom a
severe shock. As a rule the color
is never restored.
Where the baldness is uue to i
,a temporary condition, the hair
can sometimes be induced to grow
back as the health of the patient |
improves.
Many conditions of the scalp i
cause the hair to fall out. Some
skin diseases are particularly
prone to attack the scalp and
cause baldness. X-ray will cause I
the hair to fall out. If the ex- '
posures are not to long continued 1
the hair grows again.
| Ringworm of the scalp and oth
er parasitic diseases are very hard
to cure and cause a patch form [
of baldness. This kind of Alopecia
i (baldness) is very common, espe
cially in Europe.
In order to cure ba’dness, the
cause must be discovered and re
j moved. We do not know the
I cause of hereditary alopecia but
members of the same family are
often afflicted with dandruff.
This is easily spread by using the
same combs and brushes or even
the same towels.
scrupulous Cleanliness is neces- ;
sary to hair health. Vigorous j
brushing imDroves the circulation
and brings the blood to the roots, j
where it flourishes and the hair i
follicles and makes the hair grow .
Consequently, anything that tends
to bring the blood to the scalp
helns to cure or prevent dandruff. ■
When the patient is suffering 1
from the result of illness or wast
ing diseases, he must be built up J
by food and proper tonics. The 1
scalp should also be treated by
vigorous massage, and exposure
to air and light rays.
If the hair is dry, a suitable
emollient should be well rubbed in
each day. Crude oil *v» vellow
vaseline is excellent and brings
good results.
If the hair is annoyingly oily,
some tonic containing alcohol is
excellent for stimulating the scalp
and removing some of the oili
ness.. This treatment helps the
nerves that control nutrition, and
brings blood to nourish the scalp.
It will often induce a new growth
of hair. _
Jouithz
M RCE3
i of as
[
i
i
t
Russia's Farm Acreage
About Same As U.S.'s
(Fourth in a series of seven
articles on Russian agricultre by
Dr. W. V. Xambert, dean of the
University of Nebraska College
of Agriclture who headed the
U. S. 12-man delegation on a
10,000-mile tour behind the Iron
Curtain.)
Although the Soviet Union is
approximately two and a half
times larger than the United
States, its total acreage of good
agriculture land is about the
same as ours. Much of their
land is in the north and this is
mostly tundra. They have large
acreages on which they farm in
the summer, but it still in the
perma-frost area, where the
frost is never completely out of
the subsoil.
The Russians have a great
variety of crops, from citrus
fruits in the southern Caucasus
to mosses which are used for
reindeer production in the far
north. Wheat is their principal
crop. At least it covers the larg
est acreage. They produce rye,
barley, and are putting in large
acreages of corn, particularly
in the Ukraine.
We saw some excellent com
in the Kuban section which I
estimated would make about 80
bushels per acre. But this is
Auditorium
Scene Of
Assembly
The Omaha Civic Auditorium
served as a Kingdom Hall for Je
hovah’s Witnesses from eastern
and central Nebraska last week
end. The convention was held to
provide training for the mini
sterial delegates and had for its
theme, “Right Kind of Ministers.”
Mr. L. E. Reusch of New York'
City served as chairman and was
the featured speaker. In his open
ing address: “Qualified for the
Ministry”, Mr. Reusch said: “The
Christian message was simple in
Jesus’ day, so simple that fisher
men, housewives, and carpenters
could understand and become
ministers of good news in a very
short time, alter a period ot train
ing. It is so today. There is no
reason why any normally intelli
gent person who recognizes his
Christian duty cannot be adequ
ately qualified. It is a matter of
recognizing the source of instruc
tion, putting forth the effort, and
being properly trained by quali
fied ministers.”
Thereafter, the program was
concerned with instruction in
training and qualifying students
to be the Right Kind of Ministers.
Each congregation represented
will apply the methods outlined in
its own weekly Ministry School.
An outstanding feature of the
assembly was the ordination of
thirty three new ministers on
Saturday afternoon. These mini
sters will take up their duties in
various cities and towns in Ne
braska that go to make up Ne
braska Circuit Number 1.
The principle address of the
assembly, “Overcoming the Fears
of This Generation” was deliver
ed on Sunday afternoon by Mr.
Reusch to a crowd of 1,368.
“Fear is a normal, God given
human emotion”, Mr. Reusch de
clared. “If exercised in the prop-'
er way it is healthful, clean and
a safe guard to life. The fear that
has gripped this generation is not
a clean, life saving fear but a de
grading, demoralizing fear”, he
continued.
For being calm and serene in
the face of the fears of this gener
ation Mr. Reusch presented five
points. Fear of God rather than
fear of men; knowledge of the
fact that we are in the last days
of this system and that God’s
promised deliverance is near;
faith in Jehovah’s power to de
liver; loving one’s neighbor by
telling him of God’s promises
rather than fearing him; and as
sociating with a fearless people
trusting in God’s promise of a
New World.
He concluded by saying, “Arm
ageddon will remove all cause for
fear. The only fear then will be
the clean, healthful fear of Jeho
vah.”
not typical. Ordinarily their |
fields wouldn’t produce anything ■
near that figure.
The 80-bushel corn was prob- j
ably of open-pollinated type..
They have actually done very j
little in the field of hybrids. The
hybrids they are using are based
on inbreds where the inheritance
has not been well fixed through
long inbreeding.
We saw com in much of the
Ukraine, from north of Kharkov
to the Black Sea. In much of
that area the com was relatively
short and never will produce as
much com as grain. Most of
these regions are deficient in rain
fall. In the Ukraine the rainfall
varies from 16 to 18 inches. The
soils in the Ukraine and Kuban
sections are rich, both of prairie
origin.
With wheat, they have done a
good job. They’re working hard
and I think yo<ll see further
progress. This year we saw a
number of fields that would make
30 to 40 bushels. But this was an
exceedingly good year for them. ;
They had an abundance of rain
fall, in fact rainfall was so much
above normal that we saw a con- j
siderable amount of lodging in
many fields. They plant mostly
spring wheat.
I asked a good many questions
about plant and wheat diseases.
They said they had some rust
but it wasn’t troublesome. I
didn’t discover any signs that
they have serious problems with
insects.
The Russians produce many
sugar beets and what we saw j
seemed to be of good quality, i
They were mostly dry-land beets, j
Also potatoes are widely grown, j
Every collective farm produces j
enough potatoes for its own
people and some in addition. The
Russians like potatoes, in fact
potatoes make up a big part of
their diet.
And then there were the oil
crops, which are very important
to the Soviet Union. We saw
many fields of sunflowers, their
principal oil crop. We saw fields
of flax from which they get their
linseed oil and many acres of
castor beans which they use for
industrail oils; perhaps, for their
soecialized machinery and their |
Navy.
But considering their crop pro- ;
gram as a whole I would say that'
their biggest problems are get- |
ting better crop rotations, and j
developing mineral fertilizer re
sources. Actually they’re using
very little mineral fertilizers at
the moment except in cotton and
few of the high value crops. They
have a long way to go in develop
ing com, oats and ryes.
They have stepped up their
acreages on corn but they are
still behind on production and ift
t^eir methods of using com.
They’re cutting com too earily in
order to get the greatest tonnage.
They use machines that snap
off the ears, and then they put
the ears in pits or silos and use
them as grain. They are cutting
their com about the middle
dough-stage. But there is no
question that in erops they are
making rapid progress.
wurwmvTHe
PULL THE PLUG
ON STOMACH UPSET
Half-alive, headachy, when constipa
tion sours stomach? Black-Draught*
relieves constipation overnight.
Helps sweeten sour stomach too.
Laxative-Stanach Sweetener Works Overnight!
No harsh griping. Made from pure
vegetable herbs. Thoroughly but
gently uncorks clogged intestines.
Brings comforting relief in morning.
Then life looks sunny again! Get
Black-Draught today.
•In Powder or Granulated form . . . and
now in new, easy-to-take Tablets, tool
I I When constipation
I I sours children's di
gestion and disposition, get Syrup of Black
Draught. They love this honey-sweet liquid’
THRILLING NEW DESSERT! |
i
1
Vanilla Ice Cream
Topped with
Welch’s
FROZEN
Grape Juice
— poured right from
the con I
MAKE IT AT HOME TONIGHT!
lothiBW e--~' let* IWtUI
BaseMII Rales wit> inter
sretstlQiit l ■ < '*»!$»<
scaring rales.
IN CONSTANT USE BY SPORTS ANNOUNCERS,
WRITERS. CLUB OFFICIALS AND FANS
This book b authorized by Ford Frick, Commissioner sf
Baseball, and the presidents of the twe major leagues.
No baseball book offers such complete up-to-date Infor
mation on averages, highlights of previous season, pie
t jres of teams, etc. It cavers everything, including out
standing records, etc., etc. There are also schedules of
the American and National leagues, as well at playing
dates of outstanding minor leagues.
I-»
| THE SPORTING NEWS, National Baseball Weekly |
| 2018 Washington Avenue, St. Louis 3. Missouri j
I Please send Official Baseball Guide, postage paid, at j
! low price of SI.00. Check or money erder enclosed. .
N*
| NAMEI
| I
I ADDRESSS j
I CITY ZONE STATE ?
LZi
Ice Fishing Shelter
TJT/’ITH a portable, knockdown
” ice fishing shelter, anglers
can enjoy the winter sport in
comfort, protected from cold
winds. Easily built with sturdy
Masonite Tempered Presdwood
panels, which assure a long
life, the structure may be
heated. It has a plastic window
which of course may be dark
ened, if desired, by means of
a shade.
Since only seven panels are
involved, there is a minimum
of construction, hauling, setup
nrsd knockdown. They can be
auled atop an automobile or
in a pickup truck.
An interesting feature is that
the panels are fastened together
with screen-couplings. No nuts
and bolts are needed, so there’s
nothing to become lost and no
fumbling around in icy weather
getting the panels set up. Con
struction is easy, too, as there f
are only four different patterns
for the seven panels. If desired,
a stovepipe hole may be cut in
one of the wall panels. Natu
rally, the hole must be protected
by an asbestos collar.
Application of a primer and
two finish coats of paint com
plete the “house on ice.”
To obtain a free working
drawing, write the Home Serv
ice Bureau, Suite 2037, 111
West Washington St., Chicago
2, 111., requesting a copy of
Plan AE-29S.
I ICE JAMS I
ROOMS
sUzZStirKl-. ' \
'You kids wffl just have to wait, I don’t
dare stop with this guy following so close!”
NATIONAL SAFETY COUNCIL
WANT APS
ACHING MUSCLES
Raliava paint of tired, tore, aching mut*
clca with STANBACK, tablet! or powder*
8TANBACK act! fait to bring comforting
raliaf... because the STANBACK formula
combint! several prescription type In*
gradients for faat raliaf of pain.
No surgery needed
to reduce swelling
of painful piles!
In doctor’s tests, amazing new
Stainless Pazo Instantly relieved
piles’ torture! Gave internal and
external relief — without surgery!
6 medically-proved ingredients re
lieve pain,itching instantly! Reduce
swelling. Promote healing. You sit,
walk in comfort! Only stainless pile
remedy. Stainless Pazo® Supposi
tories or Ointment at druggists.
WE CARRY A FULL LINE OF
PACKAGE LIQUORS
Wa Make Free Delivery on Orders
Of $10 Or More
B & R GROCERY
2302 North 27th Street
Spotless Cleaners
1704 North 24th Street
FEATURING
ONE DAY SERVICE
Quality Workmanship-We Lead, Others Follow
CLEANING — DYEING — ALTERATIONS — PRESSING
Claytee Brazier Phone AT 8526
-PICK UP
j
Cleaners &
Laundry
ONE DAY CLEAN
ING, LAUNDRY
SERVICE
CROSSTOWN CLEANERS !
2101 North 24th Streot Wobstor lopo
..INI.mill.nil!
Dailey Contractors
-FOR
Painting & Decorating
DORMERS
■| FLOORING
PANELING
IE attic
GARAGE DOORS
INSULATION
ANOTHER BATHROOM
BATHROOM REPAIRS
MODERNIZE ROOMS
PLASTERING
PAINTING
%
3 Years To Pay
With Interest At Bank Rates
W<^Washing1*”9 | SIGN PAINTING
Phone HArney 8109 For Free Estimates
Dailey Painters and Decorators
621 North 23rd Street