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About The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19?? | View Entire Issue (June 19, 1937)
NOTE:—Your question w.’;l be answered FREE in th'a coP omn ONLY when a «1 pping of this column js enclosed with YOUR QUESTION, YOUR FULL NAME, RIRTHDATE and CORRECT ADDRESS. For PRIVATE REPLY send twenty-five e.i« and a self-addressed, stamped envelope for my NEW ASI it o LOGY READING and receive by return mail my FREE ADVICE on THREE QUESTIONS. Send all letter* to Abbe Wallace, care of The Omaha Guide, 2418 Grant Street, Omaha, Nebraska. W. R. S.—Toll me if 1 will get to take the trip this summer that was promised me last year? Ans: You will make the trip to ST. IX)U!S in Uuly and visit with your brother and his wife. They are planning many surprises for you and your t[ip will lie the most pleasant month of your life. There will he no end to your pleasures. M. A. M.—I am in love with a boy and he goes with another girl and myself. Tell me which of the two will he choose? Ans; Neither of you. He isn’t looking far a wife or even a re gu'.ai girl friend. He is interest ed in getting into some kind of business before he takes any girl seriously. Forget marriage /until yon are through school. 14. W.—Did someone put some thing on my mother to cause this oondition of her knees ? Ans: No one has tried to hurt jour mother in any way. The con dition is of natural causes but if she were taken to a good doctor ahe would soon he able to be up and about. .See that she gets im mediate medical rare. M. B.—1 wnnt to know if I will have a boy friend that ! can call my very own? Ans: Yes. but it will never be the young man that you are going with at the present time. You are wast ing your time when you go with him. It will be at least two years ! before you do meet your future husband. R. G.—Should I consider go in*' to summer school this year? Could I get a private answer also? Ans: If you feel that your arc < strong enough then the summer | school will not hurt you. A few ; months vacation does a lot to help youngsters your age and you really 1 aren’t very much behind in school. If you desire an Astrology Head ing send a quarter and I will he glad to give you free my personal opinion on three questions. G. G.—J enjoy rending your col-1 umn each weak. Tell whether or1 not I should take the trip 1 have j in mind? Ana: Don't take it if you must go alone for I don’t think that you ' will find it as enjoyable as you j think. Have a member of your fam ily accompany you on this trip. -- L. P. S.—My daughter is begging me to nltow her to take up a busi ness course and not return to col lege, I am so worried about the matter and would like to have your opinion ? Ans: There is very little that you could do but allow her to take ap the course. She is disgusted with the course she is now taking and isn’t interested enough to pass. A business career would he just the thing for her. R. T.—Should I make the change of location that I am now think ing about and when is the best sea son to make this change? Ans: Right now. The location would be very desirable for your barbershop and you will be able to get a new trade as well as keep the old customers that you have. Your present place is out of the way and inconvenient to reach. L. C.—Will the man that I am thinking about ever return to this city and if so how soon? Ans: He will return_ hut he won’t come back to be near you. Business will bring him back within the next eighteen months. Try to forget about this party. -c Everybody in town is going. Where? To the big carnival dance at the Dreamland Hall on June ®8th, given by the Bacchanite Club, featuring Anna Mae Winbum and her Cotton Club Boya. Mrs. Mahammitt’s School of Cookery Pork Steak With Spiey Sauce I thick slice of pork steak 4 tomatoes, medium sized 4 potatoes IT vinegar H cup finely whopped onions 1 t,. prepared mustard 2 T, butter 2 T. flour % t. sagar % cup hot water Salt and pepper Salt and pepper pork steak. | Brown lightly on both sides in a hot frying pan. (lover, reduce the bent, and simmer slowly for 30 minutes or until tender. Place the meat, on fire proof platter, and arrange around it tomatoes cut in halves with the cut surface dip ped in flour and browned in the ; ham fat. Place rosettes of mashed potatoes between the tomato hal ves. Placn plntter in a hot oven (400 degrees F.) until potatoes are browned, flour, blend in but- ■ ter making a brown sauce. Add the ehop|H'd onion heated in vinegar to the mixture and cook for 10 min- , Utes. Remove from stove and add mustard, sugar and salt. Pour sauce over pmrk steak. Place rings of igVeen peppier aroupid tomato , hnlvem and garnish with parsley or celery hearts. Macaroni Salad 2 mips of cooked marnroai 1 cup chopped celery 1 green pepper, chopped 2 pimentos 0 sweet pickles, chopped 14 c. grated American choose Mayonnaise and lettu’c Fold in mayonnaise the above mixture and put on lettuce and seive. Custard and Cake Itonscrt 1 pt. milk (scant) '? i "*' . Mks t‘ " . kti v Gelatine 1 i ' v ' pping cream F 11 <• n of pineapple ffnraseh r'o C-herrie* ] i'iiji r—nr 1 t van!l' i 'ii cup milk 2 egg whites Stale cake crumbs Boil together until slightly thick ened, pint of milk, sugar and yolks. I'isBolve gelatine in % cup of milk and add to custard, also add van illa. Cook until it begins to set. Ad cream which has bo»»n whipp-d and egg whites beaten stiff. Put layer of c.ustard in mold and place cherries at intervals pushing them through the custard so they will lx* on top when unmolded, then a lay er of cake cruntbs and pineapple t.hen custard. Chill and Unmold. Serve with whipped cream. HERMAN’S 1 i MARKET '1 ! 11 HERMAN FRIEDLANDER i i Proprietor ! “EAT FLEISCHM ANN'S YEAST FOR HEALTH” 24th and Lake Street WEbster 5444 HINEMAN’S GARAGE Have your car washed and oil changed for Spring Motor tuning and Battery recharging 2417 North 24th Street JAckson 9269 )n the Air and In It Chicago, June 13—A typical week on NBC Shows that spots for sepias on that network have about reach id maturity. Maturity, that is, that conies whin one is old enough to vote, for they have already passed twenty-one. NBC program planners are to be commended >^n their astuteness. Statistics prove that the Negro population is onlv f ictionally less than ten per cent of the total pop ulation of the fotin y. In large northern cities th s proportion is increased. Ixioking at it from any angle, the. favor of ' nstituency that large is not to be ignored. Since radio in the United States is mainly commercial, the purchasing power of millions of Negroes mounts amazing figures. When one considers, also, that the vast mu jo. ity of us live so close to the margins of our incomes that we must, will, and do spend—the im portance of making a special ap peal to us becomes more signifi cant. Nr,r' has taken the lead. To. To NBC. our thanks and tbi? Walter Winchtll orchid. To NBC also, a suggestion: That the timn given to s»p:a spots so often conflicts with pop ular and well established pro grams often on their own network —that one is at a loss to know low to listen to both. Specifically: Cleo Hrown_appcars on a split Red network, and must rival Little Orphan Annie for listeners: Midge Williams splits the Red igain, with House Jamison, com nentator, Nat Brusijoff’s orchest ra, and guests on the other part of he network: The Vagabonds may be heard in he locality of Chicago only by tun ng to small stations, encountering Faulty reception. Moreover, the it her part of the network carries ho dramatic sketch, the O'Neills. Good Time Society and Fibber McGee and Molly leave Nfigro au lienees in n guandnry as to which a hear: Cabin in the Cotton, featuring be Southqmnires, and Barry Woods songs are aired simultane msly: and Harlem Revue and Abe Lyman must content themselves with di vided audiences for the same res <on. AMERICAN WIENER SH01 2509 N. 24th, Street. BEST CHIU AND BEST RED HOTS IN THE WEST AM, KINDS of S \\T DWICM t-> Fine for Kidney and Bladder Weakness Flush poisons from kidneys and bladder and you will live a health er, happier and longer life. One most efficient and harmless srny to do this is to get from yout Iruggist a S5-cent box of Gold Medul Haarlem Oil Capsules and take them as directed—the swift results will surprise you. Besides getting up nights, some symptoms of kidney trouble are backache, moist palms, leg cramps and puffy eyes. If you want real results, be sure to get GOLD MEDAL- the original and genuine Haarler Oil Capsules a fin» diuretic—right from Haarlem in Holland. When vour kidneys are clogged and your bladder is irritated and passage scant and often smarts und burns you need Gold Medal —a grand kidney stimulant and cleaning once in a while. TIRED, NERVOUS, EXHAUSTED! ... Look to your stomach Start taking lloatetter's Stomachic Bitters right now ami you will quickly note how its medicinal herbs and roots help to revitalise your digestive glands and give new vigor, energy and appetite. Fatuous for 84 years. At all drug stores. 18or. bottle. $1.50. Wouldn’t it scorn that just one of these was good enough to war rant a special spot without such competition ? • • • * • A pleasant feature of NBC is the number of popular programs on which Negroes appear frequently j as guest artists and subjects of ! comment—Walter Winch fall, Jim my Fidler, Rudy Valloe, and Ben Bernie, to muntion but a few. For ! years we have known that our ach ievements, our adventures, were i good ‘copy.’ TV't so large an en terprise as NBC and its artists have also found it out is indeed gratifying. —-w. Boston Singers In Second Opera Concert Boston, JHme 10 (ANP)—A large responsive audienca of music lov ers in Brown hall, New England Conservatory of Music Building, last Thursday applauded the ef Iforts of the Colored Opera Society who presented their second annual opera concert. Composer William A. Rhode* was the conductor, fine of the fea tured artists was Mac. Pattie Yates In the role of Aida. Among tho other siegers taking part in the concert were William Richard son, Eugenie Greeme, Virginia Strother, Lillian Strother, Lillian Harrison, Sarah McKenzie, Ann Walker, Ida Wren, Matilda Birch, Harvey Higgins, Fred Riggs, John Powell, Irving Ridley, Emanuel Mansfield and Helena Mayle. Ethel Dunn was tho accompanist. rets First Negro Juror in 50 Years Jacksonville, Fla., Jlune 11 (By Richardson for ANP)—Marking tho first time that a Negro has sat. on a jury in that section in a half-century, William Clark was a member of the grand jury in Bruns wick, Ga., a few miles from here, when it returned a protest against the proposed federal anti-lynching bill. Details of the reason for Clark’s vote with the rest of the opposi tion to the measure are not known. Tho jury is said to have urged Georgia politicians to vote against the measure when given an oppor tunity. i Brunswick ia a section that has I had lynchings of its own during the past few years. BJJY SIMPSON GIFT CERTIFICATES NOW Redeemable at face value on a suit, overcoat, topcoat, tux edo, lull dress suit, until July 1/1937. GOOD as gills or Christmas, birth- J dfrys, graduation, anniver saries, father’s day, Easter, etc. CALL Charles H. Davis, the Simpson Man l WE 5627 HEALS THOUSANDS Sores, Pellagra, Syphilli*, Bad Blood, Gonorrhea, Bad Skin, Gas tric Stomach, Indigestion. Nervous ness, Run Dowa Nature and Kid ney Complaint. Guaranteed Treat ment, $1.80 Postpaid. Send $1.00 with C- O. D.’s C. A. Williams Med Co., McKamie, Ark. Agents Wanted. Expert Auto Repairs r - Orer haul inf Oar Specialty _ . AH Work GoarantoodJ Day and Xlfkt Berrieo —Phone AT. 6697— Merriweather’s Garage We repair all make* and model* H_ L_ Merriweather, prop 2299 No- Mad 8t_ Omaha, Nefc. “A NEW ALL FINISHED SERVICE” 15 LBS. FOR $1.98 11c EACH ADDITIONAL POUND Entire Bundle Finished—All Men's Shirts Hand-Finished at No Extra Cost. Bundle Must Contain 50% Flat Work. THE IDEAL FALL AND WINTER SERVICE EMERSON LAUNDRY AND ZORIC DRY CLEANERS 2324 No. 24th St_WE 1029 ALWAYS DEPENDABLE Both Our Service and Printing. We are Equipped To Print Anything From Stamps to Newspapers. We Call For and Deliver. OMAHA GUIDE PUB. CO. 2418 Grant StreetWE 1517—1518 R and G means RENEWED AND GUAR ANTEED! Many Used Car bar gains offered by Ford Dealers are R S G ears. They are the eream of the Used Car market. You must be satisfied or you get your money back like that1 If you want the very hem Used Car,look, for the R«SG emblem. 100% satisfaction or 100% refund. Ever wonder why Ford Dealers sell so many good Used Cars? The answer is EXTRA VALUE! Ford Dealers can afford to give extra value in every Used Car they sell. Ford Dealers are primarily new car dealers—they know the way to sell more used cars is to price them right. You win — they win—everybody’s happy! Payment terras are convenient — ns low as a month. Your present car may more than cover down payment. You can’t afford to wait with prices as low as they are now. See your Ford Dealer’s stoek of good Used Cars today, and "drive a bargain!” SEE YOUR FORD DEALER Raising t.ht> P amily- WhAl p« don't know /Ihmu «n>lqiies W0Lld (III a llbritryl _____IM T ' ~ ‘ 1 _— n ' I --—--—«—^ •" ( VIHERE IN MEHC1S / S~ Co6„ wove ) '»Q'J „ } wnoiO tw.S ( 4»OiN- uJiTu r \ \ HEQe evAAstUS v \ ,mJ ( ^'4 * ^ *®^° * 3^t.6.**A55 1 A.IKj'TCot'U ChOThih ro OO C»4MTJ HOU/ |‘N« 6o»4Hft -_3 .«. / INTERNATIONAL CARTOON COwIt Y.' Ti .nec^ — . ' i im »■■■