The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, February 03, 1956, Page Two, Image 2

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Cancer In Women Studied
Further studies of a new method for detecting uterine cancer,
the second most deadly form of cancer in women, will be conducted
in eight communities throughout the country, Leonard A. Scheele,
Surgeon General of the Public Health Service, U. S. Department of
Health, Education, and Welfare, announced recently.
The technique, involving examination of cells which have been
shed by the uterus, received its preliminary evaluation on a mass
basis in studies conducted in Memphis, Tennessee, during the past
two years.
‘These additional pilot projects,” said the Surgeon General, “re
present positive steps toward the ultimate goal of totally eliminating
this form of cancer which so frequently and tragically attacks women
in their early years of maturity.”'
The cell examination test is a relatively simple diagnostic pro
cedure. A physician or nurse can obtain a specimen of fluid from the
vaginal vault both quickly and painlessly. The presence or absence
of cancer cells in the specimen can be tentatively established through
microscopic examination, and where cancer cells are found present,
further study of biopsy is made to establish a firm diagnosis.
The Memphis study indicated that uterine cancer could be diag
nosed in its early stages and if the tests were applied universally, it
would probably be responsible for the almost total eradication of the
disorder. In Memphis the tests produced a case-finding rate forty
times that observed in the community prior to establishment of the
project. In the first seventy thousand women tested, 88.3 percent of
the early, highly curable cases of uterine cancer (cancer of the neck
of the womb) discovered by this method had not been previously
diagnosed nor suspected by the individual.
The project locations thus far chosen for further evaluation of
the test are: Louisville, Kentucky; Madison, Wisconsin; Detroit,
Michigan; Charlotte, North Carolina; San Diego, California; Provi
dence, Rhode Island; Columbus, Ohio; and Washington, D. C. These
programs will be activated as soon as arrangements are completed
with sponsoring or cooperating local health and medical agencies.
Each project is expected to run for about three years. In some in
stances the National Cancer Institute will participate by staffing and
equipping local clinics and laboratories; in others, funds will be made
available through grants to support work which will be carried out
entirely under local auspices.
This opportunity for rapid, full evaluation of the cell examination
test was made possible by Congress’ special allocation of $500,000 for
this purpose, included in the 1956 budget of the National Cancer In
stitute.
Details concerning the current status of each project are avail
able on request.
From Around Nebraska
Lexington joined with its neighboring town of Cozad last week
to buy more pork and bring the pork-eating crown to Nebraska.
But the effort was to no avail for the competitor, Audubon, Iowa,
won by a substantial margin.
Nevertheless, Cozad went all out and everyone concerned had
a good time.
The Dawson County Herald, published at Lexington, related
that residents of that town turned out enmass to help Cozad.
Evidently the food store business was good at Cozad last week
but the Lexington men got it in the neck for their big-heartedness.
An ad in the Herald, inserted by the Cozad bank offered a
free picnic ham to anyone over 18 years of age who just stepped
into the Cozad bank Numerous other stunts were tried to swell
the amount of pork which could be disposed of in Cozad during
the week.
• * *
But at Curtis, Nebraska there wasn’t the pork eating en
thusiasm in evidence. A survey of housewives, run by the Curtis
Enterprise revealed that the predominating preference was beef.
Most of the housewives said their family preferred the beef and
they were in accord with the slogan on the new license plates
that Nebraska is the “Beef State”. The housewives also told the
newspaper that the “Eat More Pork” effort hadn’t stepped up
their meat eating of either kind of meat and that they already
ate all of the meat they wanted or felt they could afford.
• • •
The A Capella Choir of Concordia Teachers College, at Seward,
is planning a southern tour in April, the Seward Independent has
revealed. The choir will leave April 5th and will be g*ne 11 days,
making stops at St. Louis, Atlanta, Macon, Ga., Jacksonville,
Miami, Winter Haven, Memphis and other points.
• • •
At Arapahoe the members of the Rotary Club and the Lions
Club staged a benefit basketball game to aid the polio collection
there, the Public Mirror reported.
• • •
The grain business was good in the Aurora vicinity, the
Aurora News-Register revealed last week.
One Co-Operative at Aurora showed a profit of $70,000 for
1955. Another Co-Operative at Hampton made nearly $34,000
and another at Giltner exceeded $50,000. The Co-Operatives have
tbeen having their annual meetings at which time their profits
are made public.
At Ogallala, the Junior Chamber of Commerce held a “Boss
Night” dinner last evening (Wednesday) at which time the old
boys who do the worrying and pay the bills for the other fellows’
mistakes were feted. Each Junior Chamber member acted as a
host to his boss and there was an appropriate program to make
everyone feel right at home. The 1956 Boss of the year was to be
named, also, the Keith County News revealed.
• * • *
Thirty-three have enrolled in adult education classes at
Schuyler, the Sun announced last week. In Blair, 75 signed up
for the work.
• * •
At Neligh over twenty have sought the job as postmaster and
applicants will take examinations to determine the right man for
the iob. the Neligh Leader has revealed.
The American Legion Post at Missouri Valley has donated
SOCIAL SCIENTIST TO
ADDRESS URBAN LEAGUE
__^
Dr. Ira De A. Reid, Professor
and Chairman of the Department
of Sociology at Haverford College,
Haverford, Pennsylvania, will be
guest speaker at the 28th Annual
Omaha Urban League Dinner
Meeting to be held 6:30 p.m.,
Tuesday, February 7, 1956, at the
Fontenelle Hotel.
Dr. Reid is a noted educator,
social scientist and government
consultant. He was one of the
: first Negroes to head a depart
1 ment in a top ranking college.
In addition to his work at Haver
ford, he is visiting Professor at
New York School of Social Work,
Columbia University.
He was formerly Director of
Research for the National League
and served on the faculty at At
lanta University and New York
University. His Ph D., was earned
at Columbia University.
Dr. Reid, is a member of the
Governor’s Commission on Higher
Education in Pennsylvania and a
member of the Executive Council
of the American Sociological So
ciety and the Society for the
Study of Social Problems. He is
a trustee of the National Urban
League, a Fellow of the American
Association for the Advancement
of Science and past president of
the Eastern Sociological Society.
In addition to the address of
Dr. Reid, the meeting will feature
Awards to individuals and an or
ganization for outstanding a
chievement and community ser
vices, and election of officers and
board members.
Mrs. Verne W. Vance, Urban
League president announced that
the public is cordially invited.
“We are anxious that all members
and friends of the Urban League
will attend and share the inspira
tion and stimulation that the oc
casion will provide,” she said.
Mary L. Gant
Mrs. Mary L. Gant, 58 years,
2220 Willis Avenue, passed away
Monday morning January 23 at
her home after an extended ill
ness. Mrs. Gant had been a life
long resident of Omaha. She
was a member of St. John’s AME
Church and the Cheerful Builders
Club. Mrs. Gant is survived by
her husband, Mr. Elmer J. Gant; I
step mother, Mrs. Winona Mims, i
of Omaha; cousin, Mr. Dan Straw- j
thers, St. Paul, Minnesota. Fun-1
eral services were held Thursday I
afternoon January 26th from St. j
John’s AME Church with the Rev.
S. H. Lewis officiating. Pall bear
ers, Mr. Herbert Childs, Cliff
Hammock, T. Wallingford, I.
Davis, Wayman Wilburn, Robert
Johnson, and F. Mosely. Burial
was in the family plot at Mt.
Hope Cemetery with arrange
ments by Thomas Mortuary.
A Gnu Pun
Gnu news: When father Gnu
arrived at his home his better
half complained about junior’s
actions and demanded that he be
spanked.Father Gnu said, “No,
that is your job. You will have to
paddle your own canoe.”
Frying Pan And Fire, Too
According to what we learn
from a set of doom and gloom
columnists this weary old world
has moved from the crossroads
of destiny to the brink of the
precipice of extinction.
When success turns a person’s
head, he is facing failure.
$10,000 to the new community hospital which is to be built there,
the Harrison County News announced last week. The Post has
taken the money out of a fund which it had been accumulating for
years to build a Legion building. The generous gift is enough to
equip the X-Ray room of the hospital.
• • •
The Lyons Mirror-Sun announced last week the planned con
struction of a bowling alley at that place. A new building 50 x 120
feet in size is being constructed and work will be rushed so that
the installation may be completed by July. Eight lines are in
the plans.
• • •
The charging of toll on the Decatur bridge started Monday,
January 23rd and the toll is the same as charged at Blair; 50c for
car and driver and 5c for each additional passenger. Sightseerers,
who had been using the bridge without charge pending the comple
tion of a toll house, had flocked across the new span in droves.
Meanwhile, the Burt County Bridge Commission has been
given authority to enter into an agreement with a pipeline company
to extend a line across the river, supporting it with the bridge.
Revenue from such a line runs well up into the three figures each
month.
• • •
Six giant cottonwoods in the Dead Timber reserve near Uehl
ing have been cut, the West Point Republican has revealed. Some
concern is being expressed that the big giants of the Nebraska
prairies might become extinct in time.
The cottonwoods measured 5% feet in diameter at the base
and over 17 feet in circumference. They towered a hundred feet
into the air and were landmarks in the Dead Timber vicinity.
• • •
At Scribner the Junior Women’s Club has launched a cam
paign to abolish crime-type comics from the news stands. The
Scribner Rustler, published by A1 Harper who is a former Blair
man and once on The Enterprise staff here, is backing the cam
paign.
$1,000,000 Classroom Rises OnFAM-UCampus
Above are two views of the
$1,000,000 classroom building that
is currently under construction
on the Florida A and M Univei
sity campus. Presently, the physi
cal plant of the university is valu
ed at approximately $10,000,000.
However, buildings under con
struction or on the planning
board total an additional $5,
000,000 and include an agricul
ture, and student union buildings
demonstration schoof; women’s
dormitory, and football stadium.
(A and M staff photos by H. Jones
and James Walden).
Urban League Evaluates Race
Relations Progress In Omaha
Continued From Page One
improving the living and working
conditions among the city’s Ne
gro and Indian populations.
It conducts vocational guidance
activities, promotes job opportuni
ties, develops neighborhood im
provement projects, health educa
tion and citizenship responsibil
ity programs.
It works with city officials,
Federal government representa
tives, builders, real estate brokers
and financing institutions to in
crease, conserve and rehabilitate
the supply of housing available
to Omaha residents.
A main feature of the program
is that of fostering better inter
racial understanding. The im
provement of race relations and
acceptance of all citizens on in
dividual merit are constant ob
jectives of the agency’s efforts.
The slogan “American Teamwork
Works” aptly expresses the Ur
ban League’s faith in the demo
cratic process.
GEORGE H. ROBINSON
Executive Secretary
Ain't It” So!
A toastmaster is a man who
eats a meal he doesn’t enjoy so
he can get up and tell a lot of
stories he can’t remember to
people who’ve already heard
them.
There are no synonyms. Every
word has a precise meaning of
its own, or a shade of meaning
that distinguishes it rom every
other word.
Advice!
If she looks young, she’s cam
ouflaged.
If she looks old, she’s young
but dissipated.
If she looks innocent, she’s
acting.
If she looks languishing, she’s
hungry.
If she looks sad, she’s angling.
If she looks back, follow her.
Reary For The Worst
Govenor Stratton of Illinois
has equipped his automobile with
nylon safety belts. They prob
ably will come in handy as he
[ drives through the legislative
roadblocks at Springfield.
—
“School days can be the hap
piest days of your life, if your
child’s old enough to attend.”
“The best time to stand up to
any of life’s situations is immedi
ately after you get up from pray
ing on your knees.”
“When a woman says she’s
just reached 30, you can bet she’s
been reaching for it for 10 years.”
One way to cure delinquency
is to take parents off the streets
at night.
Molasses Barbecued Meats
-1
Finger-length spareriba, glazed and seasoned with a molasses
barbecue sauce, make most winning hot appetizers for parties. Cut
the familiar way, the barbecued sparcribs will be a popular dish for
the family.
Canned baked beans, topped with frankfurters, are the better of
taste with a savory molasses barbecue sauce stirred in before heating
Barbecued chicken, perennial favorite, can be baked or broiled with
the same splendid molasses barbecue sauce.
Delicate unsulphured molasses contrasts taste-wise with the nip
of prepared mustard in an easy barbecue sauce which can be made up
in quantity without refrigeration. One basic recipe yields the season
ing touch to a number of favorite family meats.
Molasses Barbecue Sauce
4 tablespoons unsulphured 2 tablespoonsWorcestershire
molasses sauce
4 tablespoons prepared 2 teaspoons Tabasco
mustard _ teaspoon kitchen
3 tablespoons vinegar or bouquet
lemon juice
Thoroughly combine unsulphured molasses and prepared mustard.
Oradually stir in vinegar and Worcestershire sauce. Add Tabasco and
kitchen bouquet; mix well. YIELD: cup.
Appetizer Spareriba: Brush spareribs cut in serving portions with
Molasses Barbecue Sauce. Bake in a moderate oven, (350°F ) 1V4
hours, brushing frequently. 73
Barbecued Chicken: Brush broiler halves with Molasses Barbecue
Sauce; sprinkle with salt. Broil slowly, regulating beat, turning
chicken and basting often. Broil 30 to 45 minutes, or until tender.
Baked Beana Piquant: Add 2 tablespoons Molasses Barbecue
Bauce to each can baked beans; mix well. Simmer 15 minutes; top
with heated frankfurters. Or bake beans and frankfurters in a
m oderate oven, (350°F.) 35 minutes.
Edgar E. Nelson
of 2007 Wirt St was shot to
death Wednesday, January 25,
1956.
Mr. Nelson was proprietor of
the Nelson Window Cleaning Co.
for the past three years.
He is survived by his wife,
Gloria; two daughters, Edith Ann
and Vivian Lee; mother, Mrs.
Woodland Nelson; seven brothers,
Foster, Leonard, Eddie, Lawrence,
Richard, Jack and Fred; four
sisters, Mrs. Dorothy Corbin, Mrs.
Katherine Parks, Mrs. Adelaide
Franklin and Mrs. Dora Towers,
all of Omaha.
Funeral services were held
Monday, January 30, 1956 at 2:00
ip.m. from the St. John A.M.E.
Church with Rev. S. H. Lewis of
ficiating, assisted by Elder G. H.
Taylor, Rev. R. Crawford and El
der W. C. Coleman. Interment
was at Forest Lawn Cemetery.
Tallbearers were Messrs Tom
Upcher, Leroy Brooks, Clarence
Buckner, Broker Holiday, Roscoe
Vaughn, Kenneth Starks and Cecil
Wright.
Myers Brothers Funeral Ser
vice.
QUOTES FROM BRANCH
RICKEY ON OCCASION OF 21st
ANNUAL SPORTS BANQUET
THE 100 PER CENT WRONG
CLUB—ATLANTA DAILY
WORLD, ATLANTA, GEORGIA,
JANUARY 20, 1956
“I felt that the time was ripe—
that there wouldn’t be any re
action on the part of a Great Pub
lic if a man had superior skill—
if he had intelligence and char
acter end had patience and for
bearance, and could take it, as of
said year. I didn’t make a mis
take, there. I have made mis
takes, lots of mistakes. A man
of exceptional courage and ex
ceptional intelligence—a man of
basically fine character, and, he
can thank his forebearers for a,
lot of it. He comes from the.
right sort of a home. And I.
knew all this. And, when some
body somewhere thinks in terms
of a local athletic club not play
ing some other club because of
the presence on the squad of a
man of color, I am thinking that!
if an exhibition game were to be
played in these parts against a
team on whose squad was Jackie
Robinson, even leaving out all
the principle of fair play, all the
elements of equality and citizen- j
ship, all the economic necessities
connected with it, all the viola-'
tions of the whole form and- con-j
ceptions of our government from!
its beginning up to now, leaving
all out of the picture, he would
be depriving some of the citizens!
of his own community, some won-!
derful boys, from seeing an ex
hibition of skill and technique in
the world. And that’s not fair to
a local constituency.”
The continent of Antarctica is
estimated to be an area of six
million square miles—approxi
mately the area of the United
States and Europe combined.
Remember: If you have a chip
on your shoulder there must be
wood higher up.
MODERN ETIQUETTE
Q. When a woman and her es
cort enter a theater, and an usher
is at the entrance of the aisle,
which one should be first to foi- j
low the usher? '
A. The usher goes first, then
the woman, and last her escort.
If there is no usher, the man
should go first.
[
OWN NAIL
TING YOU?
immediate
Reliefl
MODERN ETIQUETTE
Q. Should a hostess alwa^ rise
when a guest is leaving, as well
as arriving?
A. Yes, always, and whether
the guest be a man or a woman
It is exceedingly discourteous if
she does not.
The most difficult thing in the
world is to know how to do a
thing and to watch somebody else
doing it wrong, without com
ment.
I FROZEN GRAPE JUICE |
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Worthwhile
Reading...
. . . for your whole family
in the world-famous pages
of The Christian Science
Monitor. Enjoy Erwin D.
Canham's newest stories,
penetrating national and in
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how-to do features, home
mcking ideas. Every issue
brings you heipful easy-to
read articles.
You can get this interna
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subscription.
The Christian Science Monitor
One, Norway Street
Boston 1 5, Mass., U. S A.
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