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About The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19?? | View Entire Issue (Aug. 20, 1938)
NOTE?—Your question w.M inn ONLY when a tipping of tl QUESTION, YOUR FULL NAI ADDRESS, for PRIVATE RE « aelf-addressrd, stamped etive READING and receive hy rcti THREE QUESTIONS. Send nl V. U—Is it wis for my mo ther to take thj trip that she has in mind? Tell me why my sister won’t come to my house now that my mother is with me? Ans: I see n- rason why your mother shouldn’t make thc trip that she has in mind. The chang- would prove ben eficial to all concerned. Pay no attenti n to your s'pter for she is inclined to “pout” ' and it won’t mean a thing in the world. M.A.R- The I)rs. said my husband had ulcers «f the stomach and I don’t believe it. He can’t keep anything on his stomach and pi* ■sse tell me his trouble? Ans: Your Husband’s illness has already b en diagnosed and you wnuld be using good ' Judgement to take the doctors advice. Do as he tells you and he will he able to relieve your husband in time, Its mighty firolish to take the attitude that you’re taking. I*. U. H.—I attended school away from home. Pleasj tell me it I will in1 able to get a place to liv« when I rc turn to school ? Ans: You will encounter no great difficulty in secur ng a place to live upon your return to school next semes ter. Continue your schooling and do not lose hope. Q- F. B.—Is my physical condi tion such as 1 think it to be? I sun very worried ? Ans: I do n'.'t think that yc-u have sufficient reason to become too alarmed over your condition. Consult a elector if you desire further information on this subject. Your fears are net founded on facts, but ra ther imagination. L R. I„—Why do I got so ex cited at times? Will he keep this promise? Ans: Your lack of self-con fidence is the chief reason for your occasional spells of ex citement. Try to overcome this fault by mixing more with strangers and also by relying more upon your own judge . snent. The man is sincere to marry you hut the match will never materialize. A. L.—Recently I became in volved in an unpleasant situation In my home city and my boyfriend sent mo to another city. Lately he naked me to return, but I am afraid of he consequences. What must 1 do? Ana: Stay where you are at the present and allow time and forgetfulness to right the situation. You will be able to see your frind very soon and after that things will not look so gloomy. You will suffer no BURNING jjpFEET Jm the iching, Itching, lorinisa ind pain oi and last over night I Ba ready toi yoor next day'i wotk. Ure T USON'S ARAFOOT Satidacnon guaranteed or yont money ratandad. $1 00 petfpiid from v 1037 Nostrand Av^, UeptA., Brooklyn, New York be answered FREE in this ror lis column i» enclosed with YOUR IE, BIRTHRATE and CORRECT PLY' send twenty-five rents and ope for my NEW ASTROLOGY j irn mail my FREE ADVICE on I letters to Abbe Wallace, Calvin’s Newspaper Service TESTED RECIPE ——By trances Lee Barton— ALL the world and Its wife has , gone streamline — with stream- | line cars and trains and furniture ! anu ngurea: iiow v we go in for A streamline jelly r making — jelly making that Is ef A fortless and ns modern as your automatic refrig erator This mod _ 4.U.. _^1.1_ takes minutes in stead of hours! There’s no long boiling to waste the fruit Juice— so its economical! And, because you get the help of bottled fruit pectin you can now make jams and jellies of fruit which never used to “jell”—-so your Jam and jelly cup board is now.rich with variety t Peach Jelly 3 cups (1V4 lbs Juice;) 6'4 cups (2% lbs.) sugar. 1 bottle fruit pec tin. To prepare Juice, remove pits from about 3*4 pounds fully ripe peaches. Do not peel. Crush peach es thoroughly, Add *4 cup water, bring to a boil, cover, and simmer 5 minutes. Place fruit in jelly cloth or hag and squeezo out Juice. Measure sugar and julco Into largo saucepan and mix. Bring to a boil oyer hottest tiro and at once add fruit pectin, stirring constant ly Then bring to a /nil rolling boil and boil hard >4 minute., Remove from fire, skim, pour quickly. Paraf fin hot jelly at once Makes about 9 glasses (6 fluid ounces each). I -! harm by remaining with your aunt. I. J- C.—Please tell me why this kid watches >•., so hard when ho sees me ? Ans: The kid has been bit ten by the Love Bug. Don’t feel so hard towards him. In fact, he needs and deserves your sympathy rath-r than your ill will, f r being stared at. Speak to him and encour age a friendship. TEXAN WHO FORCED DAUGHTERS INTO S.EX ORGIES WITH NEGROES GETS CHAIR Tyrer, Tex, Aug 8 (ANP)—In one of the most sensational cases ever tried in Smiah county Dis trict court, and with the cour ropm restricted to men only be cause of the nature of the testi- j mony the jury after being out only 45 minutes, found Charles Tucker, white Kio. Grande berry picker guilty of participating in the rape of his daughter Irene 16 by prostituting her to Negroes. Tucker was sentenced to die in the electric chair. 1 Although found guilty of par ticipating in the sex crime against only one daughter Irene .Tucker was also charged with forcing his wife, Mrs. Goldie Tucker, 38, and another daughter, Ruby, 17 to ha'io illicit relations with 19 Ne groer, for an average of 75, for each offense. Mrs. Tucker said she and her daughter had taken in enough money in one night to make a $25 down payment on a car. Since the present term of Dis trict court ended last week, it was I believed that the trial of Mrs. I Tucker and the 19 Negroes—all j held on statutory rape charges— ' will not be held until the Novem- j her term of court. Witnesses a-1 gainst Tucker were his daughter, Irene and two residenas of Bul lard—Sam Moseley, 55 a railroad section hand and Young Johnson, 58, a farmer. Althi ugh the case is or,,, of plain “pandering” and the iamily one of ill repute, it e>i0repa,«E0 auto class ihSt.a ^ Altt* _before_ 1 mmmn _AFTEB mMESpw^lmraM®! Ct .q06 CUMl c r omaha.neb«; SSSg,^ Free Estimates 6,000 Children Get Benefit from Nursery Schools PFRSonAUTiB in hiusic* ** HARRY VON TILZER, A.S.CA.P. ^ ■fc.-The Old Song* Never Die ■ .. ' -r ' ' ---.—1^1 °lD time hit . '^/A|T till ■ rHE SHINES - kellie ....... ^ hu;* Xfa 1U* a» By Daniel I. McNamara MORE than two million copies of his first published song were sold, and his entire share of the profits was just fifteen dollars, for Harry V’on Tilzer’s "My Old New Hampshire Home" was turned out long before the creators of song had allied themselves Into the American Society of Composers. Authors and Publishers for mutual protection. Yon Tilzer’s first song was pub lished early In the Gay Nineties Since then he has made and lost several fortunes. Now the perform ing rights alone of hts hundreds of popular song successes are of great value No popular song folio is com plete without at least half a dozen Von Tllzer numbers. No review of old-time songs is heard without a Von Tllzer creation of the type of ' Walt ’Till the Sun Shines Nellie." “When the Harvest Days Are Over. Jessie Dear" and ’Down Where the Wurzburger Flows” Harry Von Tllzer ran away from his native Detroit In 1886, a boy of fourteen, to join a circus He be came an actor with repertoire shows, and at sixteen was a sea soned player as well as composer and singer of original songs Urged by the famous comic opera star. Lottie Gilson, to develop his llair for songwriting, he came to Nsw York from the midwest, earn ing transportation as a groom in a carload of horses. He reached the goal of his dreams in 1892 with $1 65 in his pocket. At Tony Pastor's—the music hall da luxe of the period—he found customers tor his unpublished origl nal songs, at two dollars and up. When at last he induced a pub lisher to take one of his songs. Von Tilzer’s full payment of fif teen dollars was five dollars down (Music Features l and the balance on approval of the, song by the publisher’s daughter.] The' song earned the publisher a fortune. Years later Von Tilzer be came one of the leading members of the American Society of Com posers. Authors and Publishers. America’s great performing rights Society, which Victor Herbert or ganized In 1914 to protect musical copyrights i For more than forty years. Von Tilzer has been an Integral part of the Broadway scene. His genius for translating into popular song hits the simple drama of the common place has been shown In scores of memorable songs. Sometimes he shares the creation of songs with lyric writers, often he turns out both words and music. Collaborators have Included Andrew B Sterling. Vincent P Bryan. Raymond A. Browne, William Dillon. William Jerome. Will A. Heelan. Stanley Murphy and Arthur Lamb As a publisher, he has brought to light such 8ongwriling celebrities as Ernest R. Ball. Jean Schwartz Fred Fisher, Jimmy Monaco ar.r many others. Norah Bayes leapei. into fame by singing his "Down Where the Wurzburjyir Flows.” and Blanche Ring found the Von Tilzer songs. “I’d Leave My Happy Home for You" and “On a Sunday Altci'i noon." her passport to theatrical fame Von Tilzer published the first songs of George Gershwin and Irv ing Berlin Dapper, debonair, buoyant with almost youthful enthusiasm. Harry Von Tilzer carries lightly t.he weight of advancing years, times his step to 'he acceleration of the modern tempo He delights in the creation of new songs in the modern idiom, but finds even greater pleasure lit the security in modern programs of his song hits of a generation ago. : Photo Syndicate) was thought here the prosecution may demand the extreme penalay for the 19 Negroes involved. FIRE CAPTAIN IS PROMOTED TO CHIEF — New York, Aug. 13 (ANP)— File Captain Wesley Willems, the eifly Mre 'department’s ltfne Negro rtffcpr, v <« -- . Phursday to the rank of batallion rbi t ' 1 J. McEldgott. Seventy-two white also won prom t >o> s. Williams joined the department on January 10, 1913, and became R lieutenant in 1927. He was ap pointv,| ’aptam June 1, .>‘..34, com. maiding Engine Company 5« V»1 e»c he had be-n as a ro kie. Pel’ore joining >h> fire <!< iwn lr.ent he was » liter carrier, ceive «jn annual salary of $5,300. As captain he was paid 4,500. Wil liams is 40 years old. Shoe Pride or Shoe Shame Shoes look new again «4th our new invisible half soling. Lake Shoe Service 2407 LAKE ST. RECORD SAVINGS Build—Modernize—Rc-voof Re-side Insulate Get Free Estimate MICK UN LUMBER CO. 19th & Nicholas J V. 5000 ■ FOR SALE—Marinon .5 Pass. Dc luxe Sedan, Maroon, 6 wheels Tires, Mechanically Sound $8.5.0( See at North Side Transfer, 241! Grant. I— I jmsumatit£...ntm ' UP Over 6,000 Negro children of pre-school age are benefiting frctn the training and care given them in more than 100 nursery schools provided in the Education Pro gram of the Works Progress Ad ministration. Not to be confused with day nurseries, these WPA nursery schools are havens for tots coming from underprivileged families. The pictures above show some of these children who share in this Federal directed pro ject. Some 700 capable Negro work ers are employed in WPA nursery schools. Under, their guidance, the children are taught good hab its in an environment which best develops their physical, mental, emotional and social relationships, caving no stone unturned in see ing that their charges get off on a good start tow-ard useful citiz | i enry, the WPA nursery school ; teachers get the cooperation of | the home in stpdying the needs of th children. They also see t/hat th parents learn the best methods of caring for and training the tots. Entire communities throughout the Nation have learned the value of pre-school training for their children. These young.?ters learn i to face the mrld beyond their cradles and cots and miss none of the fun as they learn. 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