V The Omaha Guidites "5 “The Doer of Expression” — - Edited by ‘UNCLE GIL’ -i*™™™-'”' .• Y.V.V.V.V.VAV.V.Y.V.YA BOOST JOE LOUIS Wear a Joe Louis button now on sale at your local drag store. WAVAVAVAWAVAPAV.1 WANTED TO BUY 100.000 Pounds Brass, Cop per, Lead and Aluminum 20.000 Batteries 50.000 Auto Radiators Are we Buying- You Bet. If it’s Auto Parts You Want It Will Pay You to See Us First. We Are Here to Serve You. Consolidated AUTO Parts Co. 2501 Cuming St._AT 5656 Home of Kangaroo Court IT PAYS TO LOOK WELL MAYO’S BARBER SHOP Ladies and Children’! Work A Specialty. 2422 Lake Street iCIeo Cola { | Queen of Sparkling Drinks ? 11 2 oz. for h C I i ll i > > a a t t t- t -r t f I | IBEER j 1 LIQUOR j l SOFT DRINKS \ j 2229 Lake St. JA 9195 j NORTH SIDE TRANSFER Lang Distance Hauling Moving and Storage Ptione WE5656 2414 Grant St HINES TAILOR SHOP Cleaning, Pressing and Re pairing. ^ Dyeing and Hat Cleaning Dresses Cleaned and Press ed—Fur Crafting, Etc. 2523 Q STREET Johnson Drug Co. Liquors, Wines and Beer Prescriptions WE. 0998 .. 1904 N- U4th St *0 . If^iJOEL-OU l> TLzSSBM A Full SU. S|»eWly poMdPhet* 1 n|( with mn can »♦ . % $we#t G*>rgi. Brown Hair Drewlng Everybody want* a pletur* of this fTJJt SgWer. w •••lean-up” Bli Money by giving »WMT »1*0$IS Autographed T'hoto 19" x 1J") of JOE LOUIS ^^^E»C^-0nHu^d.WuVtS JM. IndUn. Arts ■« Board of Health Postpones Guidite Picnic Hello my many neices and ne phews, Uncle Gil writing. Fate seems to be working against as for our mammouth get to gether, however, don’t be alarmed we shall have our picnic. Upon talking to Dr. Floyd II. Kinyoun, city health commissioner, recently your Uncle Gil was informed that due to the prevalence of^Poliomyelites, better known to tihe city as Infantile Paralysis, that it would be neces sary to delay the picnic at least three week, the date to be set later. ,It is Uncle Gil’s desire to cooper ate with the health department in it’s effort to prevent the spreading of this dreadful disease and thus higlhly favor the delay of the pic nic until such time as is deemed safe. Then we can get to gether and have that wondeiful time wh'dh we are all looking forward to. -o STEPIN’ FETCHIT PARTY IS CALLED OFF BY CITY Stepin’ Fetchjt, Hollywood's slowest motion and the man who made a million dollars through his ability to portray “doin’ nothin,' expressed his sincere regrets af not being able to meet the hundre Is of till'd te club members last Friday me • rg at Miller park, the party having been called off after a (el f: one call frorfl Dr. T. H. Kin youn to Uncle Gil, advising against the gathering due to the spread ing of Infantile Paralysis among the children of Omaha. Mr. Lincoln Perry (Stepin’ Fet chit), expressed his wishes to meet the club oai his return to our city, and asked Uncle Gil to urge upon each member, for him, to remain loyal to the principles of the Guid ite club. -o History Questions Fill Each lllank 1 •-- was the founder of Pennslyvania. 2. The Milesians were on the in vading people in-. 3. Robert Williams was banished i the year —-, Who? , Is the author of ‘The American Commonwealth ? ” 2. Employed Henry Hudson to find a route to India? 3. Were three American Com missioners who made the treaty of peace with Great ritain? Answers 1. William Penn 2. Ireland 3. 1936 Who 1. James Bryce. 2. Dutch East India company. 3. John Adams, Benjamin Frank lin, John Jay. IguaranUa you get a new start ir life.. No ease beyond hope. Stop w.,rry Ing I Write me today. Information FPKE M. WILLIflPMS, Journal Square Sta Jersey City, N. J. Captain Rose of the Omaha Police department, who will be the ( principal speaker at tfye Youth T>ay program, Sunday after noon at St. John A.M.E. Church. The Guidite World J of Music By Miss Ethel Jones The Kettle Drum Arabian Music Music in the Mohammedan lands is ever in spite of their religion and is never as in the case of Christ 1,unity, postered by it. By the iron law of tradition music is ■ considered at least among tfee doubtful amusements of true be lievers. And yet Arabia has had its mu sic and song. Among the cr.ce-; 1 \rabs, poet; y and song were close ly related. The poet recited or chanted his own compositions in the evenings or at public fairs and festivals. There were also the early war songs of Omar and Khalid and the Sinbad sailors tune as they sailed down the Persian Gulf. The people of Jlauf in Northern Arabia are at the present day most famous for music. They are espe cially adept at playing the Rebaba. This is considered their national instrument of music. The drum or table as it is called is common among the town Arabs and is used at their marriage feasts. But all over the desert one hears only the rebobo. This instrument is simplicity it self in construction. A box frame s made ready, a stick is thrust through and in this they pierce an eyehole for a single peg. A kidskin is then stretched upon a hollow box; tlhe string is plucked from a mare’s tail and with a bent twig the instrument is ready. Another insrument used is the Arab a viol- (, The singing one commonly hears is very monotnous and the tune nearly always depends upon the whim of the singer. Autar, one of their own poets, has said that the song of the Arabs is like the hum of flies. Antar lived in the times of ignorance, however, and since (hat time some very beautiful mu sic has been heard in Arabia. The QUESTION BOX Who Knows? 1. What is the meaining of the I word “im promptu ? ” 2. What is nn idyl? 3. What is a march? 4. What is a nocturne ? Lost Week’s Answers 1. The serpent is an ancient bass wind instrument, so named * on account of its resemblance to j a serpent. This instrument lhas been j happily replaced in modem bands j and orchestras by the tuba, it is j also the name of a reed stop in an i organ. 2. Soto vo’ce means softly, in a low voice, in an undertone. 3. The tenor clef is the C clef when placed upon the fourth line. 4. Fine is the end or the termin ation of a composition. -o Earn Extra Money School days have come, to an end, which means boys and girls everywhere have the opportunity to make merry during the three months vacation. Here’s hoping that a majority of the Guidites es pecially the boys will fnd jobs and earn money so as to hejp their parents defray expenses at home. While we’re on the subject of working, perhaps it wouldn’t be a bad idea if those of you desiring to earn some money during your snare time, would sell copies of THE OMAHA GUIDE. Asthma Cause Fought in 3 Minutes By dissolving and removing mucus or phlegm that cause* strangling, choking. Asthma attacks, the doctor's prescription Mendaco removes the cause of your agony. No smokes, no dopes, no Injections. Ab solutely tasteless. Starts work m 3 minutes. Sleep soundly tonight. Soon feel well, years younger, stronger, and eat anything. Guar anteed completely satisfactory or money back. If your druggist Is out ask blot to order Mendaco for you. Don’t suffer another day. The guarantee protect* you. Parents Should Study A Child Who Fears To Face Reality By S- Edward Gilbert Fate had not been too kind to Eiarbar in those first impressionable y'ears, between five and ten. Her family had broken up, and Barbara rtad been sent to live with Uncle Gtorgg and Aunt Mary; a well meaning enough pair, but not the i>pe that could make any child feel at home. Unde George "bdlowed” and Aunt Mary was always distant and dignified. Barbara a sensitive child was afraid of both of them. They always appeared disapproving, fhen too, the new school was rather appaling; much bigger than the school at home and full of strange new faces. It frightened Barbara. Her classmates leased her- I guess laughed at her, perhaps persecuted her. New Girls, especially new girls like Barbara are always per secuted. Built a World of Her Own As a defense and a compensation against a strange, fearful and un friendly world, Barbara built her self a world of her own. No one shaed it with her except a group of delightful imaginary folk, whom Barbara "ruled” with an iron hand. Most imaginative children create worlds of their own to which they do not yet really belong, becomes too overwhelming, too confusing, too fearful, or too tiresome. It is natural and normal, and to be expected as long as the child does not show indications of taking up a permanent residence there, as long as he does not discard the leal world altogther, and lose all interest and curiosity about it. Will IV.ially Discard It A well adjusted child eventually discards his imaginury world for the real one. Slowly, year by year, he acquires more interest in the re'd world, becomes less absorbed in the world of fantasy. His growing need for friendship, responsibility and manual creation is better satisfied fcy the real world. By 10. usually, his fancies play only a small part in his life. Without aid or guidance he has made the adjustment. But if a chid has ween frighten ed by reality, as Barbara had been, he will not go back by himself. A handicapped child, a child who has long been ill, one who has been forced by circu ms trices to spend foo muce time alone, one who has been persecuted by other children or one who is too sensitive to ‘‘take it" does not find the change from unreality to reality easily. OLE ’S Battery Station WE SPECIALIZE ON BAT TERY SERVICE 2934N. 24th Ja 9999 4 cups ol^ gahyuxd tea, KEEP CLEAN INSIDE! You'll Ilk* tho war « *"°P‘ Y»“ hoA ovurnlght, to tho tooling of Vforln' to qo fits no* ond inlido doonlinoii! Elimlnofo tho ioft ovof wattes that hold you bock «<"••• hoadachtt, to* dtqostion, ote. Garflotd Too li not a m rafli wwkor but it CONSTIPATION bothori you. It wtt cortdtnly "do wondorit" I0l ond 2S« of dwartofft — or. WRITE-FOR FREE SAMPLES of GoffioW Too and Garfield Moodacho Powdori to: GARFIEL* TEA CO.. Dopt. C, Irooktyn. N. Y. Records of the Week *'.loot’s join and bout hurray! Send the C* .nip on ha way .Solid fellow, All round good fellow— ’that’s Joe the How be 11’" Inspired, written, arranged, re hearsed and recorded within twen ty-four hours after Joe Louis had annexed the fistic title of the world by virtue ofi n sledge-hammer right, the platter side, “Joe the Bomber” now riding the disc cir cuit, remains one of tlhe most uni que testimonials ever accorded to any public figure. To Billy Hicks and his Sizzling Six go the plaudits for the record ing of ‘ Joe the Bomber,” and to these colored swingsters it surely must have been a labor of wive. The Toe Louis paeon is backed by wfhAt is labeled a “hot dance” with the suggestive title of “Fade Out" —whichc is the nice way the boys pay their respects to his former majesty of tihe squnre ring. This platter has been acclaimed by Har lem diseophilcs as a "natural.” Paging the sultan of sccat! Mr, Cabell Calloway makes his appear ance on the platter circuit with the song (hit. from Broadway’s cur rent "The Show is On” backed by "Congo” The Hi de ho Man does not turn on the acrobrtic vocals in the latter selection thereby giv ing the Calloway orchestra chance to show off their unappreciated instrumental virtuosities. Teddy Wilson, with the usual Billie Holiday vocals, does his best to appease the waxhounds in ‘ Easy Living” and “Foiling Mygr^f.” Waxeutter Wilson borrowed sever al Count Basie aces for this re cording. The Duke is always with us. This week Ellington sends to the fore Barney Bigard and his Jazzopators who surrender to the platttrwaya "Get It Southern Style" and ‘'If You’re Evtvr If n My Arms Again.” The first selection is, instrumental ly speaking, devoted exclusively to the top-notch clarinetting of reed man Bigard, but is opposite offers on Ellington pot pourri with all the soloists showing to excellent advantngfe. From the brassman's bluebook comes Henry (Red) Allen with a (handpicked crew to beat out the two pop ditties, "Don’t You Care What Anyone Says” and Meet Me In the Moonlight.” Those who have seen the Marx Brothers' current filmfarce, “A Day at the Races” will recals Ivie An derson’s singing of ‘‘All God’s Chil lun Got Rhythm” as one of the highlights of the picture. This week the famous Ellington song stress offers the same number to waxhounds with the dhoral as well os arcdhestral assistance of her Boys from Dixie. And from the ‘‘Cotton Club Parade” dhauntress Anderson takes as backing, “Old Plantation,” for a really distin guished disc Enter Fats Waller lor a Victor double, ‘ Lost Ijove” ard “Don’t \ou now or Don’t You Care?” The hefty jvnry-pounder has a little trouble inserting his Wallerisms in the sob-hallading of the first sel ection, but in tihe latter tune he falls in the groove with his beat up treatment. It’s a roaring, smash banging windstorm and it’s headed straight for dance popularity at a m’le an hour clip. Forgive 'fe hyp rhol<*s hut that’s just the kind of a gale J V«VS WOOMC RECKON Wg v ouwm 4or A. I ( NE-OfVK, J 1 . _*