—*—:—«—*~"s A A i ^ * — * w ^ " Hot*:—You* Question Wru. Be Answered "Freb" in This Column. For a "Privet* Reply” . . . Send only 2Jc for my new Astrology Reading 8c Luc*y Day Chart and receive by return mail a confidential letter of Fret Advice analyx lni three ()) Questions privately. Sign your full name, address, and birthdate to all letters, and please include a self-addressed, elamped envelope for your reply. care of Abbe’ Wallace, P. O. BoxAtlanta, Georgia. M. A. M.—Please solve my pro blem for me. I am up here to find work and I can’t seem to get a job. I have met a person and he says everything will be alright and for *+uh*a*tmt*t*»*i*»*a**ht*4 NORTH 24th ST SHOE REPAIR 1807 N. 24th St. WE. 4240 YOU CAN’T TELL THEY ARE REPAIRED— BECAUSE OUR INVISIBLE HALF SOLEING METHOD “leaves No Repair Look” ON YOUR SHOES. THE NEW SOLE WITH AN INVIS IBLE JOINT. —POPULAR PRICES— CHOP SUEY King Yuen Cafe 2010'/z N. 24th St. JAckson 8576 Open from 2 p. m. until 3 a. mi American & Chinese Dishes SQUARE DEAL POULTRY MARKET 2520 Cuming St. WEBSTER 4277 FRESH EGG3 DAILY FREE—Delivery—FREE T., 1F^- "^EEL. .11171 MONUMENTS & GRAVE MARKERS American Memorial Co. Quality at A Price—None Better TWENTIETH & CUMING STS. PHONE AT. 4927 .-ihooucino *«your "**"*'de*k* j Bardinas * COLONIAL CLUB BEVERAGES Tom ColUn.. White Soda Sparkling • Ginger Ale Water mu QTn °^_ Kidneys Must Clean Out Acids Fxcess acids, poisons and wastes in your blood are removed chiefly by your kidneys. Oetting up Nights, Burning Passages. Back ache Swollen Ankles. Nervousness. Rheu matic Pains, Dizziness, Circles Under Eyes, and feeling worn out, often are caused by non-organic and non-systemic Kidney and Bladder troubles. Usually in such cases, the ve?y first dose of Cystex goes right to work helping the Kidneys flush out excess acids and wastes. And this cleansing, purifying Kidney action, in Just a day or so. may eas ily make you feel younger, Et.r0I'f^®. better than in years. A printed guarantee wrapped around each package of sures an immediate refund o* *Jle J!*'1.?.?™ unless you are completely satisfied. Youi have everything to gain and nothing to lose under this positive money back guarantee so get Cystex from your druggist today for only 35c. I. C. C. ex. for N. S. me to stay. Should I?. Ans: Stay here in the city. Gei out each inornling and make a thorough canvass for work—- yoi cant find it by sitting around en joying life. Register at the agen cies and get some of the working girls near you to help you find day work. You can find employment within two weeks if you make up your mind to look for it. t ****** S. T.—Answer and tell me what to do. What is wrong with this man I am with? He beats me for no cause at all and I want to know what is wrong? Ans: He’s feeling his oats and wants everyone to think that he can manhandle his women. Pack up your things and move out and leave him right away If he tries to bother you—get in touch with the local authorities and have him locked up. ****** A. K.—When I get well should I go back to my job or should I try something else? Ans: Return to your job until you can find something better to do. Your being sick has Put you in the hole and you must not waste time hunting w*»rk now. I do pre dict a change of jobs for you be fore fall. ****** W. S. B.—I love a girl very dearly. I devote all of my time to her but he seems to be losing interest in me. Tell me what I should do under these oiircum,stan ces ? Ans: Get you another girl and make her jealous. She likes you, but will never feel the same to ward you that you do her. At this period in your life you feel that you can't live without her— but it can be done and without much worry on your part. W .S. P—’Is sister going to tak“ the trip promised to her? She seems so upset about it? Ans: It is indicated to me that she will be disappointed—she will not make the trip at all. Your OLDER SISTER has had her plans upset and she can’t do as she wanted to by your younger sister. ****** H. G.—My uncle promised me a car if I got thru school as I should and I am anxious to know if he will keep his promise Ans: Yes, he will see thot you get a car—not a new one, but one that looks nice and in good condi tion. When he visits home this summer he will drive his ear down and leave it. You and your mother will get a lot of pleasure from the car—drive it carefully. ****** G. C.—Should I take my money and take the trip home? Ans: No. Keep your present job and hold onto your money. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim CITY FISH MARKET 2418 North 24th St. HOME OF FINE BUFFALO FRIED FISH & RAW FISH AT VERY LOWEST PRICES FREE DELIVERY JA-4617 We Offer for Your Approval A — Complete Curtain Service and Another thing,— Have Your Dry Cleaning Done Now! —Cash and Carry Discounts— EDHOLM&SHERMAN 2401 North 24th Street VVE. 6055 ■ / } pi V s / A HE'S A 6000 HITTER Z-PZ$r (I -TOR A SHORTSTOP. jl \}a/V\ES BUS' CLARKSON vJOINS NEWARK EAGLES AFTER. BRILLIANT STRETCH AT TOLEDO. BLS: »»eV JuIt 27 Conditions at home haven’t chang ed any and you will feel terribly disappointed if you do go, so stay right there. ****** DEMCRATIC SIDELIGHTS (Continued from page 1) delegation, but when ’he started to chee\ing Congressman’s Mitchells speech, he suddenly discovered he was seated with the Mississippi delegates just one seat behind his own state gang. ****** Several of the ambitious boy's went into abl ue funk when they discovered that Bob Vann had ar rived in town and was in circula tion down at the Stevens and the Jilackstone hotels. One excited fellow said “Bob has found out that Perry Howard and Church will not allow him to ride on the front seat in the Wlllkie band wagon and now he is t”yii)g tp ride our donkey.” I Just two questions were asked the dapper Walter White when he concluded his statement to the Res olutions committee for the NAAC P. Guess they did not want to crank Walter’s motor. The New York and the Michigan delegation stated a little revolt against everything in general Wednesday afternoon. Had a meeting in the Grand hotel thnt cau.'ved Frank Young of the Chi cago Defender to almost lose his mfind. Frank wanted a story he did not get. ****** The Oklahoma delegation head ed by Bill Hazel of Boley main tained headquarters in a suit® at tho G-and hotel, Mayor Letchcn Hill, Dr. J- W. Sanford and Major H. C. McCormick were busy putt ing Oklahoma on the map. ****** Dr. W’illiam J. Thompkins really embarrassed his better half Sun day. Caller! on he1 for a speech, but when the Kansas City girt left the mike the boys said she could make a better speech than Doc’. ****** Talk about a wild scramble by the “gate crashes’’ you should have seen the boys getting up in front and on the line when the genial Jim Farley arrived Sunday after noon to deliver his address to the National Negito Democratic assoc iation. ****** More than 1,000 telegrams were piled in Congressman Mitchell’s office Wednesday morning follow ing his notable address to the con vention Tuesday. ****** Torn Davis of Cleveland sure raised t'he devil in the caucus at the Grand hotel Monday afternoon when somebody tried to take a whack at Edgar Brown. "Th's race of ours would be a lot better THE OMAHA GUIDE A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER Published Every Saturday at 2418-20 Grant St OMAHA, NEBRASKA PHONE WEbster 1617 Entered as Second Class Matter Ma'»ch 16. 1927, at the Post Office at Omaha, Nebraska, under Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. H. J. Ford, — — — Pres. Mrs. Flurna Coopet, — — Vice Pies. C. C. Galloway, — Publisher ond Acting Editor Boyd V. Galloway, — Sec’y and Treas. SUSORIPTION RATES (Strictly in Advance) One Year — — — $2.00 Six Months — — — 1.25 Three Months — — — .60 Single Copy — — — 5c All News Copy of Churches and all organizat ions must be in ou-1 office not later than 1:00 p. m. Monday for current issue. All Advertising Copy or Paid Articles net later than Wednesday noion, pre pppfVnr- date of issue. to insure publication -EDITORIALS At best, the presiuency of the United States is one of the wo -.dis toughest jobs. When a man tak es the oath of office from the Chief Justice and goes to live in the White house, he accepts duties and responsibilities which will be with him every waking minute of his time. The next president will take on an even tougher job than the great majority of his predecessors have faced. He will take office in a time of world c -isis and national emergency. And as soon as he sits down at his desk he will have to grapple witn problems whose isolution is known to no one. He will have to prepare to deal with changes and trends which menace all that the United States has creat ed since the Revolution, and which threaten the veiy foundations of our system of government. The next president's most immediate problem will be that of national defense. It is apparent that wo will be able to produce little that is tangible, so far as defense Us concerned. this year. It takes time for a great nation to switch from a peace eco nomy to a war economy. The ground wo-*k for a workable program is being laid now, but difficulty bottlenecks exist. And we start the defense pro gram under the definite handicap of a $45,000, 000,000 national lebt largely built up during the last eight years. There is a possibility that the debt will reach and perhaps pass the $70,000,000, 000 mark before we are none. Even so, the defense problem, vital as it is, Is perhaps the simplest rf the next president’s jobs— few question that we will f'nd some way to produce and pay for the guns and airplanes and battleships ] we mu,st have. Before him will be other problems, g far-reaching and immensely diff'cult, which must eventually la; solved. And here a *e a few of them: There ip the problem of trade. Today Hitler dominates the continent—tomorrow he may domin’ ate all Europe. And Hitler does not deal in money which means dealing in gold. He deals, instead, in liarte-’. His economy goes back to the most prim itive of economic systems. He says, in effect, “I have coal that you need—you have machines that I need—so we will trtade them.” The task of the United States will be to either meet Hitler’s terms, which involve a veritable economic revolution here, or to force him to meet u-’ traditional trtade policy which few economists believe he will be willing or able to do. There is the problem of agriculture, which is related to the problem of trade. We have spent immense sums in the name of fa nu relief, and it is apparent that we have gotten little of durable worth in return. Today the problem grows graver, as our foreign markets disappear. There js a certainty that Europe will want and need more of the pro duce of our farms and ’ranches—but there is also the certainty that Europe will be unable to pay for it. The next president, sitting fin his ornate office, will have to seek a way out, and whichever way he turns there will be gigantic barriers between him and success. There ip the problem of unemployment, coupl ed with the problem of relief. The defense program will make many jobs, but St does not look as if it will take care of the millions of unskilled and little skilled men and women who today are supposed in one way or another by government. In some im portant lines there is a serious shortage of work men—many willing hands reach out foi? jobs, but they are not adequate to perform the tasks. Train ng people for highly skilled work takes a long time and it also takes facilities which do not now exist in sufficient quantity. there is the problem of the American standa (l of living. Whatever we spend for national defence —f).fteen billion, twenty billion, thirty billion— must eventually come out of the people’s pockets Perhaps fifteen percent of the national income will now be devoted to armament, in addition to possible debt increases. That means that we will have fif teen pet cent less to spend for housing, food, cloth ing, entertainment—all the luxuries and necessities The next president will undoubtedly attempt to in create our national income sufficiently to make uj for this—but, so far as we can see now, he is fore doomed to at least partial failure. It is almost uni ve -sally agreed that the standard of living mus suffer—that American,s will eat cheaper food, iivi in cheaper homes, spend less for subsistence ant for pleasure. There is the long-range problem of the effect! of wa ■ and war preparedness on the entire eeonom ic structure. The factory that is built to maki shells iis either worthless when the emergency ii c-ver, or must undergo a costly revamping process W ar-time booms, in other words,produce peace tim, repressions-—and the bigger the boom the longe and deeper the depression. These are but a few of the problems the nex president must face. It isn’t an enviable job. off if we had more Edgar Biowns and fewer fools who «et their sails to catch the passing brleeze” said the irate Ohioan. When the big demonstration started for Roosevelt Wednesday night, Herbert L. Bruce delegate from New- York, was seen in the forefront of the banner wavers w'ho clogged the Isles for 45 min utes ****** Irrep ressible Edgar Brown was on the floor of the stadlium when Lester Hill made the nomination speech for Roosevelt. The Hatch bill dqes not mean anything more to Edgar than a hitching post in a conversation ****** Who were those two-gun guys Who questioned folks in the Grand Hotel Wednesday moaning Rum or is that a bunch of racketeers are attempting t mussel in on the management of the Democratic campaign, ****** W'hile the belligerent galleries were booing Senator Glass when he said he had received two anony mous messages saying Fa-Jey could not get the nomination be cause he is a Catholic a man who sat behind this writer said “Relig ious tolerance in this country is like freedom for the black man. It's a chemeriical something talked about, but never a reality. ——- ■» RABE’S BUFFET for Popular Brands of BEER and LIQUORS 2229 Lake Street —Always a place to park— _S iff rafiflBaj-iTf 11 ■■ 1*7-1 • ■ • •-,> the Godefroy Manufacturing Company to itudy method! e* preserving women's natural beauty, and to make { the results of this research available to the public. ^tr. W A KM WKATHKIl CLOTHK8 With the first scorching rays of the gun. we nil rush frantically to the closet and drug out what re mains of Inst summer's wear, gronn Inwardly or aloud, clap our hats on our heads and set nut In quest of some cool clothes. Unfortunately, that’s Just about the system we do use when rnught short hy the tlrst hot days. But those of ns who buy our summer wardrobe In haste, have n good three months to wilt and repent our thoughtless purchases. Choose Washable Materials Unquestionably, the tlrst requi site of n summer dress Is comfort. There are so many attractive wnsh materials on the market today, so mnny dainty-looking sheers, that there Is nr reason why the modern woman should suffer from the heat unduly. Unless economy Is no con cern of yonrs, he sure that the ma terials you choose are washable. The heat being what It Is, few of us can wear a dress more than one day without tubbing. It Is iny con-1 vietlon that cottons, linens and nl lled materials nro cooler than silks, but If you have a preference for silks, there ore plenty of pretty, cool-looking wnshnble silks. The girl who starts out her day In a dress freshly washed and stnrched feels better able to cope with the problems before her than tf she Is worried about whether she looks n bit limp and dragged before the day has gotten under way. Another Important fnctor to con sider In selecting your summer wardrobe Is whether the fabric will hold up throughout a hard day without looking too limp and mussed. Printed dresses, ns a rule, show muss less than solid colors, und colors look loss Wilt6a nrtor » few hours' heat thnn nil white. Don’t Wear Gnug Dresses In Summer Another thing to remember Is not to have your summer frocks tilted too closely. Don’t think thnt I ad vocate going nround In a dress a size too large so that yon look for nil the world like a sack tied In the middle, hut don’t have your collars too high, your holts too snug or your sleeves too tight. Give the air room to circulate If you want to take advantage of nny stray breezes thnt come your way. In reepnt years cotton under clothes have come Into vogue for summer wear and they nre n boon to the busy woman. Cotton slips nre less clinging thnn silk ones and they nre easier to wash and Iron. Comfortable shoes, too, go far to ward helping yon through a trying summer. It’s not necessary to get them too large, but you will often find thnt your feet nre more com fortable In a size wider thnn yon nre accustomed to wear In winter. Remember that comfort and utlD Ity ore of prime Importance In sum mer. Beauty In summer depends to a great extent on cleanliness. If your hot-weather frocks are easily tnhnhle and tubbed frequently yont major wardrobe problem Is solved. What are your beauty prob lems? Write Marie Downing, Larieuse Beauty Foundation, Room 321 — 319 North Fourth St., St. Louis, Mo., and she will be glad to answer them. Be sure to enclose a self-addressed stamped envelope. 7G0LDEN-GL0 11A BEAUTY ESSENTIALS B'T*ll/' MAILED DIRECT TO YOU (ij)7rU, . . . . . , , _ whm wail aua datlvaa., A big beauty box containing ft.. -7 t-.-r aeven facial neceaaitiea all of tha /or j1-ls aB. n finest ingredients and weighing , a lr ' over two pound, now only 88f. worth ».voo wj pins postage. 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