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About The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19?? | View Entire Issue (Sept. 2, 1939)
W>OTB>—Yemr question will be analyzed fret In this column euly when you include a clipping of this column and sign your full name. kirtkdate and correct address to your letter. For a "Private Reply"... ■end only 25c and a stamped enrelope'for my latest ASTROLOGY READING corering your birthdate; also a free letter of advice analyzing three Questions. Explain your problems clearly and eon ftne your questions to those within the scope of logical reasoning. — Send Youa Lette* To — ABBE’WALLACE. P.O.BOX 11. ATLANTA. GA. I). U Ci.—1 have been keeping;! i«ip with your column for a long t:me and I wish to know if I will go to New York anytime soon? Aps: It’s not at all likely that you will make a trip of S; this kind withi^i the next few years, when you become self supporting then save your money and carry out this plan. The big city is even more ex citing than you believe it to fcs. M. C.—1 am just wondering what to do and 1 can’t make up my mind. In fact 1 have been Duffy Pharmacv We. O60fl 24th and LAKE 8TRE1T8 PRESCRIPTIONS Prew TV It v err * , AMERICAN WEINER SHOP 2509 North 24 tb Street Beet Chili and Best Hot Dcgr ‘ in the West 1 An Kinds of Sandwiches -,k..—-— HOME MADE ICE CREAM ' - ■ ■ ■ --- 1 1 ~ ' ' ' 1 ' ~ ~ ~.' ' ~ ' T ' T T* ! Bill’s Loan Bank | MID MERCHANDISE STORE Confidential Loans at Reasonable Rates Unredeemed Quality Merchan dise at a Great Redaction. Up * to* Date Clothin*. Dry Goods. Ladies Ready to Wear MHlinery Hosiery, Blankets, Shoes for the Entire Family. 1804 N. 24th St. Tel. WE. 1369 LAKE , ■ SHOE SERVICE The Services that Pleases. A Complete Shoe Service J. L. Taylor, Prop. 2407 Lake St. XigpgpMS: PAIN IN BACK MADE HER\ MISERABLE * f Read How She Found Blessed Relief Muscle* were so sore x •hecould hardly touch “ t* w j (hem. Used Hamlins Wizard Oil Liniment and found wonderful relief. Try it today if your muscles are si iff. sore, achy Rub it on thorough ly. Keel its prompt wrarming action ease pain; brtn* soothing relief. Pleasant odor. Will not •tain. Money-back guarantee at all drug stores. , ---— thinking all summer if I should •stay at home with rtiy parents or go to work ? Ans: Rema'n itl home and help your parents/ with their work until you </un -find em ployment that would prove worthwhile for you to take it. I do not advise you leaving home ir search for work as you are entirely TOO YOUNG and TOO INEXPERIENCED. M. D. G.—Should 1 stick to G. VV. or go back to G. M. as 1 can’t reem to make up my mind about these two Ans: There’s no need to lose any «l*ep over either oig* of these fellow8 for neither one of them will , mean very much ip ,y°Pr lift?. It would be to your advantage to make some new friends and don’t become too interested in every person you meet. B. A.—Does my son have a spell on him that is causing him to travel all over the country as ho does ? Ans: He’g fond of traveling and can’t seem to be satisfied in any one place for a long time. There isn’t a spell on him ho will settle down and estab lish himself after he meets the “right girl” which shouldn’t be very long. L. P.—Will I be successful if I take the job finishing aprons that I saw advertised in the maga zine and would it suit me? Ans: I don’t think that you would want this kind of work for it means a very very small amount of money for your ef forts. At your tender age, I feel that you would be better satisfied to get out and get public employment. A. E. F\—If I write my kids father do you think he will help us and would it be all right? Ans: Don't bother to try to find him for he has no inten tion of help!ng out with the child’s expenses. He’s well aware of the expense attached to raising a child but is de termined not to do his share for you. L. A. .1- Will I get to go to beauty school and if so tell me when? Ans: Well that depends on you. It will be necessary for you to save the money for you to go on and whenever you decide to begin trying it should not take but six or eight months to get enough ahead to take the course. M. M. C.—I feel that I am in love with this boy who works for my daddy and I wonder if I am and is he in love with me? Ans: You’re infatuated but not in love. May I remind you that when you do meet the right one and fall in love you “IT PAYS TO LOOK WELL” MAYO’S RAKBKR SHOP Ladies and Children’s Work A Specialty —2422 Lake Street— Thrifty Service 6 lbs. for 48c 7c EACH ADDITIONAL LB. ”6'ic ON WEDS.” ALL FLAT WORK BEAUTIFULLY IRONED. BATH TOWELS FLUFFY DRIED. WEARING APPEARED RETURNED DAMP READY TO IRON. WE GUARANTEE COLORED CLOTHES NOT TO FADE. SHIRTS FINISHED IN THIS SERVICE FOR 10c F*(’H IF DESIRED. 20% DISCOUNT CASH AND CARRY Emerson-Saratoga Southwest Corner 24th and Erskine Sts. don’t need anyone to tell you whether its love or not. You will know. Don’t fret about love at such a young age, enjoy yourself. -0O0— HOLLYWOOD— IN BRONZE HOLLYWOOD — (By Ruby Berkley Goodwill for ANP)— Search for a native African to play the leading jungle role in "Stanley and Livingstone,” sent Hollywood scouts to far-off Aby g ir.ia. There they signed Hassan Said, descendant of a noble Abys. rirnan family, to recreate the his toric role of the Hassan who led the Henry M. Stanley jungle ex pedition in 1S71 that was sent out by the Newl York Herald to find Dr. David Livingston. Director Henry King was insistent that a real African play the safari lead er. Re member ng Hassan Said’s performance in the silent version of “The Sea Hawk,’’ King asked the 20th Century-Fox casting of fice to find him. SAID, however had long ago left Hollywood for his home in British Ber-Ber and it was there he was found after a two month search. He speaks four languages in- the picture, hi* native Somali, Swahili, Masai and English. Spep cer Tracy plays the part of Stan ley and Sir Cedric Hardwieke is Dr. JLivjngstone. Remembering the very fine work done in “Trader Horn” by MUTIO native African, one has to applaud Director King for seeking to make his picture as authentic as possi ble. EDDIE Anderson opened at the Paramount theater when the latest Jack Benny picture “Man About Town” hit the screen here. Ander son who sarted h’s professional career on the stage in a sep'a re vue will be right at home before the footlights. Radio however brought Anderson his greatest acclaim and all dials were tuned to the Jack Benny program when the whole cast went to Waukegan to attend the premiere of "Man Albout Town, ’ and made their final broadcast before a 14 week’s vacation. Hats off to Metro-lroldwyn Mayer for the line in ‘‘Tell No Tales" starr’ng Melvyn Douglas when the flightened young school teacher under Douglas’ question ing says, “No, the kidnappers were not colored men.’’ If Theresa Harris had contributed nothing but the short dramatic scene in "Tell No Tales,” for which she rates and gets screen credit, to her Hollywood career, she would have proven herself a capable act ress. Miss Harris who has been handed several choice roles ’s ra pidly climbing and as 1 watched her I found myself wondering did George Randol productions really have to send back eaiit for a doubtful discovery when one was right at their doorstep in the per son of the winsome, cultured Theresa Harris. Many old favorites are to be seen in the wake scene of “Tell No Tales,” including Madame Sul Te-Wan who plays the Mother of the slain boxer; Ernest Whitman, manager of the Cat who boasts sorrowfully that “he had a bad left, but 1 straightened that out for him,*’ Ruby Elzy and Tradous Jones. T he Rene brothers who in col laboration with Clarence Muse caught the ear of the nation with Sleepy Time Down South” have done it again with “Dusty Road” thanks to Nelson Eddy who used the popular classic in his latast picture “Let Freedom Ring.’’ --- ' ^ A STORM—To dream that you art out In a snow storm is a good fign. You will surmount your prerent difficulties and emerge unscathed. HUNTING — To dream that ytra ere hunting, or with hunters Im plies that your present efforts are liable to be In isla. Try another tack! LE MOYNE “MAD MAGICIANS" By Gene McAnulty Memphis, nn.—As in previous years the LeM' vne “Mad Magics- j an» will return to the griditton with an aggivgation of men who exemplify some of the best in football material, when they start practice on Monday, September 4. Guided by Coach Jack Adkins ami captained for the second con secutive year, by Elmer Henderson the 'big 200 pound tackle, the team is expected to equal the one which boasted of the athletic prowess of Rouhlac, Spearman, and many other former stars. Th:s year’s roster will include practically all of last season’s men and ngmy new faces who will attempt to carry on the victorious campaigns for the old Purple and Gold. Looking over this season's sche dule we find several of our old gridirtfn enemies, Xavier Univer sity, Lincoln Un:versity aid Ten nessee State College back on the Mad Magicians’ card enemy ter ritory which will deprive most of us from witnessing the battles; however, we will be able to view the powerful State College team from Nashville, Tennessee. The “Mad Magicians” open the season in Tuskegee on September 23. The following week they en counter the Alabama State team in Montgomery. Xaxier’s Gold Rush will furnish the opposition in the Crescent City on October 14th, and fourteen days later they move into Jefferson City, Mo„ where they meet an old rival, 1 Lincoln University. Arkansas State will invade the Bluff City ill thp ordpr luimoii I YAWN-CHASERS By Noonan * 1 ad Says th’ war scare has boomed the laundry businessl" Men who are expected to re I turn from last season’s squad are: Elmer Henderson, Chattanooga, Tenn., Thomas Henry, Nolan Brown, James Broadon, Willie Smith, William Paschall, Winton Hardiman, William Pickett and David Powe of St. Louis, Missouri, John Wylie of Little Rock, Ark., Jessie Turner of West Point, Miss. Walter Mitchum of Paris, Tenn., William Hall of Princeton, New Jersey, James Boone of Indiana polis, Ind., William Pugh of At lanta, Ga., and Garland Pinkston, Lenzie Peterson, James Grant, James Barber, Clarence Leckett, Matthew McComb. James Chand ler of Memphis, Tennessee. •-M——oOc-I Special to the Omaha Guide From: NATIONAL PRESS AND PUBLICITY OFFICE, Packinghouse Workers Or ganizing Committee 205 W. , Wacker Drive, Room 1123 Chicago, IU., FRA 52K0 CITY WORKERS & THE FARMERS TRYING TO GET TOGETHER Ch’cago, Aug. 24—Advocating closer cooperation between farm ers and city workers for the bene fit of both, Edward A. 'O’Neal, president of the Atn^an Farm Bureau Federation* laft week told the fifteenth annual session of the American Institute of (Cooper ation: “Farming people should stand right by labor in demanding that industry give security to workers.” O’Neal made this remark in re ply to a suggestion by a Pack inghouse Workers Organizing Committee official that the farm er's income would be markedly in creased if the city worker were to receive enough pay to enable him to purchase sufficient agri cultural products. The average art-f nual income of a packinghouse worker in Chicago is far below the amount necessary' to sustain a family of four, ha said, quoting U. S. Dept, of Labor figures. O’Neal also made a plea for peaceful settlement of industrial disputes and recommended, in particular, that Armour and C and the PWOC settle their currmt dispute around the conference table. A national policy convention of the PWOC met in Chicago Julj 16, with 865 instructed delegates representing the union’s 81,00f members in attendance. These delegates empowered their nation al officers to call a strike in Ar mour and other packing companies because of the packers’ repeated refusal, according to union offi cials, to meet with the PWOC to negotiate a ’contract. fi-6 Bernard Market 2012 No. 24th St. We 1073 WE SELL FOR LESS (•; ~ .i g W.V.V.V.WWVJWWW CHOP SUEY Open from 2 p. m. until 3 a. m. King Yuen Cafe .. 2010'/, N. 24th St. JAckson 8576 American and Chinese Dishes AW.W.W.W, WWW CHICAGO FURNITURE COMPANY “Where Thrifty Folks Buy” Furniture, Rugs, Floor Cover ings & Stoves JA. 4411 1833-35 N. 24th Evening Phone WE, 2261 Folks! BUY Living, Dining and Bed room Suites and SAVE Half or more. YES, rugs, floor coverings, gas ranges, oil stov es. SAVE IRE^L MONE^l CHrCAGO FURNITURE CO. 1838 North* 24tjh St. MASTER AUTO MECHANIC | Satisfaction Guaranteed 0 CREIGHTON GARAGE— DOWNTOWN jj 1623 Davenport Street H One block north of Post Office at 17th street Q ' our car called for and returned on the dot jj -■ ...I - Wc Pay Cash For 03d & Antique Guns WE 2869 521 No. 16th St i®* HEADS '-dod do you DOODLE?} - 1 ■ '■»■!■ ' i, Rl£G. U S FAT. OFF. ^ r. Recently professors and psycho!-: exists have had much to say re garding the "character’ 'revealed in i person's “Doodles” — those i ' conscious little scrawls and scrib bles one makes on newspaper mar gins, telephone pads and the like. , But m offering this entertaining, series of "Doodle-bug” beads, we rlaim no ulterior motive. We pre fer to think that most folks just "doodle" for fun! So go to it with a soft pencil, and see how many varied and amusing express!'’ s and types you can create from the simple outline beads which w.ll appear in this paper. Remember,, it’s the latest pastime, and “Every* body's Doodling it!” - y WOMEN’S, MISSES’ FALL SKIRTS 1.95 ^ EACH Dress smartly for school or sport wear. Skirts that look higher priced but will fit your budget. Clever styles in pleats, flares and button trims. Lovely new fall colors, also black and navy. Sizes 26 to 32. \ GIRLS' AND TODDLERS’ NEW SCHOOL FROCKS Styled as smartly as any young miss could wish. In good qual ■y ity fabrics. Choose them Fri day in sixes 1 to 6 years and 7 to 16 years!.....