A N 0 GUIDANCI *T7r.°r>flTl7l Wb*H r?“r mind *• »e>*bted down with worry S,.\J,ko7i:ou^L.^A^NG «P^"^ad^lT,oo**w1ll “T^“dr"* ‘nd ,bl^tbd*,u * »u *tt*r» Explain you can* tally aad »****•“• *«»iB «>• raalai of reaacn Writ* to THE ABBE WALLACE SERVICE P. 0. Box 11 Atlanta 1, Georgia X. X.—We need your help. My brother married in ’41. They sep arated once and went back toge ther They have one child and she that she called his. He was called that she called is. He was called in the service and when he left she started running around, drink ing and leting the children go any ing and letting the children go any has taken her back and insists that the family accept her as tho nothing had happened. Should we accept her in the family? Ans: Your brother has already made his decision in the matter. For vou and the family to take up the issue at this late date would only upset your brother and pro mote further hard feelings. He has seen fit to forgive her. .do the same my friend. Be gracious and NOW IS THE TIME TO GET YOUR SHOES REBUILT ... Quality Material & Guaranteed Quality Work LAKE SHOE SERVICE 2407 Lake Street ^wg rrrr * * ---- 2 llli & I-ike Sts. 1 * PRESCRIPTIONS - Free Delivery r —WE-0609-— Duffy Pharmacy UllllllllllllllllllllllilllMlllllillllllMHI' GOOD OPPORTUNITY TWO »nt". earner and adjoining, •» SMlkam corner Slat and Grace Es tenet t r froalagr on both 21st nee Grace. Ideal far 2 or more homes •r especially atilted as Church frusada, Stake reasonable offei lit W Kill AT El. Y. Address BOX A33* ar Call HA-WMM. I GAUGE GOAD PREKEIIRED Kindling per load $5 00 ■UCKSTOXE LUMP COAL $1160 per ton JONES FUEL & SUPPLY Company 2520 Lake Street Phone AT 5631 kind in future dealings with your sister in law. J. W I received my letter a few days ago and I want you to know how much you helped me and my family The more I deal with my advisor, the happier I feel. I am awful proud I found a true friend in you. All my neighbors think you are wonderful too. You will hear from me again. Thanks. ‘ I Wonder”—I love my wife, sometimes more than I should, I think. She tells me that she loves me. but the way she does, she couldn’t. She belongs, or she tells me. about four social clubs which keeps her out at least three nites a week somewhat late. I have ask ed to escort her to and from af fairs, she told me yes. but every time I come for her she tells me I need not go, she’s going with another lady friend. Please answer in your column what steps to take. Ans: When husband and wife start leading separate social lives it invites misunderstanding and often times ends in divorce. You are being too meek with her. She must be made to realize that what she is doing is extremely selfish and unfair to you. Her gadding about to social functions while you were in the army was understand able. But now her first duty is to you and a wife’s place is in the home. J. Me—I am going with a mar ried man whose wife follows him wherever he goes. I am expecting his baby. I am not in love with him. Lately, I haven’t cared much for anyone for long at a time. I have planned to go see a fortune teller to find out if its natural or not. Do you think I should? I am really upset. Ans: There is nothing unnatural about having a baby; that’s your trouble. You need to be under a doctor’s care, not a fortune teller. Begin making plans for the babvs arrival. You have a friend who will stand by you during your confine ment. You must profit by this mis take and never allow yourself to become attached to a married man in the future. Its the girl who al ways pays. for Tho C**-/*=t GUIDE'S Cameraman! FOR THE \ LATEST 5 PICTURES READ THE OMAHA GUIDE Ads Get Resuits! muuouoiioooooonr ~n ni Would Like to Buy 39 to 42 model car from private party. WA-8289 WANTED! Wan.* the rent of *tnall Apt., for man ami wife, no child ren. Call JA. 9532. _ CHICKEN DINNERS MARY’S CHICKEN HUT, 2722 N. 30th St.. JA. 8946. Our Chicken Dinners are Something to Crow A bout. Robt. Jones. Propr._ ^HOME LAUNDRY" WANTED! We Specialize in Flat Work and Ruff-Dryed Bundles. We Mend and Sew on Buttons. • PERRY HOME LAUNDRY 1110 North 23rd St._AT-5623 • FOR SALE A Coal Circulating Heating Stove, Practically New—Used only two ' mo. Price S40.Q0. Call JA-3274. • Fur Rent 1-room in modern home at 2764 Grant St., Call AT-2350 room For RENT: for young lady. JA 6283, Mrs. M. Johnaon. FOR SALE—Seven mom House, 1914 No. 40th St. Needs repairs. Make offer. Call HA-0978. • FOR RENT— Two rooms to two Young Ladies. Phone JA 6283 House for Sale, 2515 N. 17th St 54.500. 5-r'm bungalow 1-wk pos.’ 9 AUTOS WANTED! SELL US YOUR CAR FOR CASH! • We will come to your home. Fred King Motors AT 9463 2056 Famam Piano, beti, miac. furniture, 5704 S. 26th SL MA-1006. -Wt-V/V,',',V Dieic & UteA Furniture Complete Lme—Pamt Hardware We Buy, Sell and Trale ideal furniture mart 1511-13 North 24th— 24th & Lake —WEbster 2224— " Every thmg For The Home" ^IT PAY- !•* . ADVEKH'E • $50.00 REWARD For unfurnished Apartment or five room House— Rent or lease. Call WE. 4312. FOR SALE CHEAP One ladies, cony dyed Seal Fur Coat, size 14. orn only two months. Apply al 7011/4 South 17th Ave. • Wanted To Rent WANTED TO RENT. Small apart ment. Call ATlantic 9780. Ask for Mr. Jones. FURNISHED ROOM Downstair* for man and wife, 2507 Hamilton AT-0992. HELP WANTED Couple for Cook and Caretaker— Good Salary. Colored Old Folks Home, 933 North 25th St. JA-07U4 • SLEEPING ROOM For Single man or couple. HArney 7059. HOUSE FOR SALE Vacant, ready to move into, eight rooms, all modern, full basement, double garage, large lot. Phone the owner at AT-7783. $3,750. Beautiful Drape Suits all sizes Oxford Clo. Co. 1101 Farnam • MeBrady Products Orders Taken at 2506 Burdette St., Telephone JAckson 7284. —Mrs. C. M. Elder. DRESSES AISD COATS, Size 44 and Children's Clothes CALL GLen. 4065. NEIGHBORHOOD FURNITURE 4 CLOTHING SHOP BIG SALE—Overcoats, all sizes Shoes, Ne Stamps; Ladies Dresses Rugs, Bedo, Gas Stoves and Ol Stoves. ••We Buy and Sell" — TEL. AT. 1154 1715 N. 26th ST. LAUNDRIES A CLEANERS EDHOLM A SHERMAN M41 North 24th St WE. 605S EMERSON LAUNDRY Z324 North 24th St. WE. 102* F DICKIES FOR FALL H' 12 DICKIES FOR CCHOOL-GIRLS College girls are really going in for dickies this semester. . that is, if the girls at Bennett, Palmer Memorial, and A. and T. in North Caroline are typical of the Ameri can College girl. Bennett College is an all g rls school located at Greensboro, N. C., Palmer Mem orial is the only finishing school for Negroes in America, located at Sedalia, N. C. and A and T. Col lege is the state college for Ne- ^ groes at Greensboro. The main reason for the flour ishing of dickies is the prominence of tailored suits. Dickies take the place of blouses. They’re easier to keep up and they are so cheap a young school Miss can easily af ford to own a dozen, or more. They can be made in colors and in almost any design that suits the taste. For instance, there are the I frilly ones with nice fluffy lace I fronts, there are the tuxedo sty les and there are the pleated and stitched front styles. The kind of dickey you wear depends abso lutely on the cut of the suit the young Miss intends to wear. If its a real manish cut she can make Omaha‘s Civic Center Up For Vote Nov. 5 Omahans who have long admired Denver’s civic center will have the opportunity November 5 to vote for the creation of a similar com munity hub in Omaha. A civic center is one of 14 ur gent projects evolved by the May or's city-wide planning committee for the purpose of placing Omaha in the front rank among progres sive cities. E. F. (Gene) Agee, general chair man of the Mayor’s committee,' in pointing out that there would be a separate ballot for each pro ject, urged voters to go to the polls as early as possible. Discussing the improvement pro gram with committee members to day, Mr. Agee termed the civic center “an imperative need in Om aha”. “Throughout America,” he added ' “engineers' who make a study of | efficient municipal operations have become convinced that a centrally ! located civic center not only very I rapidly becomes the heart of the community but always becomes a source of pride to the citizens of that community.” The Mayor’s committee has re commended for the center the sec tion of the city north of Dodge Street from 24th street east to 16 north, to Cass Street, west to 2C street, south to Davenport street west to 24th street and south tv it GET YOUR f | SCHOOL : |! Fountain Pen ? | , | | Ted’s Pen Shop $ on 16th St., at Farnam £ • PENS SI.00 UP l X ' ? herself a dickey complete with bow tie in regular variety of shapes; or with the stitched tuxedo front. I the suit has a more feminine cu the young lady can make herself the more lacy and frilly kind of dickey. All in all the class-room and cam pus this season promise to te on of the neatest, attractive and most eye-filling. I can think of nothing that makes a young woman more attractive than a finely tailored suit matched with a suitable dick ey. They all can be made at home for less than a dollar. To give you a real idea of how attractive a dickey can look above we present two lovelv Neil Scott models wearing the latest dickey fashion. Miss Elayne Hurt, left, wears a canary yellow tailored dickey with steel gray gabardine suit Miss Naomi Sterlinf center, wear a two-peice green wool suit with white eyelet dickey, and extreme right, Miss Sterling models the same attractive suit with a w'ut pique dickey with hand stitch in ° You can receive complete instruc tions on how to hake these dick ies by mailing a stamped self-ad dressed envelop to Mail Dept., 5 Clark Street, Newark, N. J. Dodge street. Mr. Agee declared that it is for tunate that Omaha can acquire the necessarv p-operty for the project The Mayor's committee has set the cost for creating a civic cen ter for public buildings at $960,000 If approved by Omahans in the November 5 election, the center will provide Dnd for a combined city and county building, a mod ern post office building, a rublic librarv, and a new auditorium, ulus fhe already-established Jos lyn Memorial. Mr Agee said thrt the civic cen j ter p’an has the hearty endorse ratn the federal -overnment, whir’- n looking toward the con struction of a $7,000,000 port of fice building in Omaha. Another issue to be placed be fore the city’s voters will be the improvement of Omaha’s public market at eleventh and Jackson Streets. The Mayor’s committee has pie ced the installation of toilet fac ilities, running water, garbage r<_ fuse disposal, and the improvement of parking and traffic facilities at the market at a cost of $81,500. To bring this about, and parti cularly to improve the parking si tuation, Mr. Agee said it has been recommended that the city acquire by condemnation or otherwise a lot north of the market on Howard Street and the purchase of 'a lot west of the area. It has also been recommended that the city or the Omaha Whole sale Produce Market company, owner of part of the market area, ; purcharse the Windsor Hotel pro perty at the east end of the block at Tenth and Jackson streets. Mr. Agee pointed out that vo ters will also have the opportuni ty to have their say on November 5 on 12 other projjects, inccluding airports; river-rail terminal and ri j ver transportation; fire stations; police stations; grade crossings and viaducts, streets, boulevards and traffic signals; parks playgrounds and recreation; parking; munici pal garages; auditorium; naval ar mory; and sanitation. GENE KRUPA TO GUEST STAR FOR OWN FILM COMPANY Gene Krupa. that ace drummer man will appear as a guest star in “Boy! vvrhat a Girl!", first fea ture production of the newly form ed Herald Pictures. Inc., of which he is vice-president. The Herald Pictures were or ginized for the purpose of bring ing up the production level of all Negro films and to supply over 600 theatres throughout the country with a steady flow of features to be released at the rate of one per mo. for the next year. Jack Goldberg, president of Herald Pictures is a pioneer in this field. "Boy! What a Girl!” by Vincent Valentini, goes into production at Fox Movietone Studios Sept. 16 with Arthur Leonard handling the direction. Marva Louis, ex-wife of heavy weight champion, Joe Louis, heads a cast of some of the best known names in the Negro amusement field. These include Babe Wallace (played opposite Lena Horne in “Stormy Weather”); Sheila Guyse Others in the cast are Slam Ste tJv'£ AiVtAV.5 Owe iS A ( iGHT G/j T 15uT wE. CRtTHEr> /Viy SPECIAL 'PAt7ER* \7HIS OHE OVER CA*T SELL HArs-i^oir, i ,.IT Z!U5>T jHERE J-Ocks BlrrE 7HA7 ~ • 7 you TO VESTERDAV /7 / - 7Py it O^ ,r^ - Go AuORO A*0 i LOORi> 5rrtE T Oaa V ~T^F AfR fHAOL HELP SELECT j you «-=-J — 2-— 0*E ^ I I HUCKLEBERRY FI1SIS theamehs: 'j GO OH \HJ ,Hom CAH YOU