• « MIND AMD ,C0LUMM »HU!IH THI TIOUILIt * **l,<0 AWD WlAtT CAW »H COUNtll AND 6 U I D A N CI s- - ^ ••*•**“* within the min of nuoa Writ* te THE ABBE’ WALLACE SERVICE! f 0. Box II. Atlanta I, Georgia D. c-. --- ri'#u your column every week and find it very inter esting I have a friend that I’m going with, but we are from diff erent sides of the railroad tracks. He claims he wants to change his ways and marry me. Do you think I would be making a mistake with this fellow? Ans: You could not love the man feeling as you do about him. No marriage can survive when one LA1U.E LOAD PREFERRED Kindling per load $5 00 BLACKSTOAB LUMP COAL $1160 per ton I FUEL & SUPPLY Company 2520 Lake Street Phone AT 5631 GOOD OPPORTUNITY TWO *»l". rwur mill adjoining:, »» MuthnrM fomrr SIM and r.rart Eilrulir IrnnUKr »• H.nh 21*1 and Grarr. Ideal for 2 or more home*, •r eoperlallr ••ullrd a* I'burck • round*. Make rett«ottal»le offer IMRI.III ITKI.V. Addreaa llO* ASM sr C all II A-flMW. 3404 Bedford Ave. Is located on a double corner lot. 100x128. 6 rooms, all modern, and with a downstairs bedroom, kitch en cabinets, oak floors throughout automatic water heater, garage. Price $4600. Mr. Beckman, AT -4976. AMOS GRANT CO. Realtors AT. 8380 NOW IS THE TIME TO GET YOUR SHOES REBUILT_ Quality Material & Guaranteed Quality Wfi*k LAKE SHOE SERVICE 2407 Lake Street MmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiimiiiH 2 llli & Lake Sts. ]> PRESCRIPT toys / Free Delivejv —WE4)60*f— Duffy Pharmacy iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii D Designed to speedily relieve simple headache and painful discomforts of neuralgia. fJV Measured doses — In powder [j form for quick assimilation. r\ Proof of merit Same type for F T mula over one-third century. D Standard D S P. Ingredients. Laboratory tested, controlled. Sin price range of everyone. 10c and 25c sizes Caution: Use only as directed. mate ieeis vasuy superior 10 tne others. He has faults which are repulsive to you and marriage would not correct them. Do not continue to encourage him unless you can accept him as your social equal. t D. M. J.—I need your help. My husband and I have split up and I am not going back to him. My mother wants me to come back to L. A. with her. I have a good job here but I am alone and have no brothers or sisters and I want your advice about staying here or going to mother. Ans: A change right now is not advisable. You should get all mat ters settled permanently between yourself and husband before you leave the state. You have a good job, a place to live and many good friends and you should fare very well until you return to your mo thers' home. We have been married for 3 years. My husband and I didn t live together but a few months be fore he was sent overseas. He has been home with me now for six months and I know that I am ma king his life miserable. I do al right every day and just as soon as he comes home from work, I seem to get mad as I can be and start fussing and can’t seem to stop. I know I hurt his feelings. When he is not around me, I feel that I can't wait to see him. I love my husband and he loves me. Tell me what to do. Ans: You are an adult now and must cut out the emotional display. Surely, you realize your husband will not tolerate this be havior much longer. You two are deeply devoted and could be very happy and you must not continue hurting him as you are doing. Shower him with love and kisses instead of fussing and complaining I recommend that you pay a visit to your family physician for a checkup. Have your husband go along. A. J. B.—This is my last year in high school and I am wonder ing if it would be wise for me to go to the university next fall. I am afraid I won’t be able to make , good grades. Must I try or give i up the idea and go to wrork? Ans: High school work hasn’t stumped you at all and there is no reason for you to begin dread ing the college corriculum. It would be well for you to go ahead and register right now, paying your entrance fee. if you expect to j get in the university this fall. Let nothing interfere with your educa tion. C. L. G_I am undecided what I must do. When I was discharged from the navy I promised C. S. I would send for her but since I have been home, I have fallen mad ly in love with E. P. Which one must I choose -for k wife ? Ans: Slow down Charlie..You shouldn’t promise yourself to two girls knowing that you can't mar ry but one. You are too eager to j get married..You need to give more thought to the future mate , and choose a girl whom you love j devotedly and feel you cannot do without and one whose interests are parallel to your own. When its the real McCoy, there won't be a doubt in your mind which girl to ask to be your wife. You are not quite ready to take this step. C. E. P.—I am a girl of 19 and very much in love with a married man of 25. He seems to be very much in love with me. He asks me out often and visits me on Sunday afternoons and I have no other friends but him. Should I stop going with him? He is really nice to me. Ans. Its not surprizing your friends have dwindled.. a girl os stracizes herself completely in time if she persists in dating a married man. You are much too young and attractive to ruin your life in this manner. You are not happy and you will grow miserable Classified Ads Get Resuits! Would Like to Buy 39 to 42 model car from private party. WA-8289 BUY A LOT in Bedford Park, beauty spot of our community. Call JA-7718. C McBrady Products Orders Taken at 2506 Burdette St., Telephone JAckson 7284. —Mrt. C. M. Elder. 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 • AUTOS WANTED! SELL US YOUR CAR FOR CASH! • We will come to your home. Fred King Motors AT 9463 2056 Famam ■ NEIGHBORHOOD FCRNTTCRE 8 CLOTHING SHOP BIO SALE—Overcoats, all sizes Shoes Ne Stamps; Ladies Dresses Rues, Bed*. Gas Stoves and Ot Stoves. “We Buy and Sell” — *EL. AT. 12*4 171* N. *6th ST, 5 ROOM HOUSE FOR RENT 2801 Miami Street. AT-2350. ROOM FOR RENT— For young lady. Call HA-7784. _ FOR RENT 2 room apt. for couple only. AT. 6281. Seeks Witnesses Would Parties whom saw accident of Alberta Norman on Crosstown car at twenty-fourth & Lake Sts.. on Sept. 29, please call WE. 2754. CHICKEN DINNERS MARY’S CHICKEN HUT 2722 N. 30th St., JA. 8946. Our Chicken Dinners are Something to Crow A bout. Robt. Jones, Propr. DAY NURSERY Mother’s Care 2537 Patrick, JAckson 0559. LAUNDRIES A CLEANERS EDHOLM A SHERMAN 1401 North 24th St WE. 605S Piano, bed, misc. furniture, 3704 S. 26th St. MA-1006. New & Used Furniture Complete Line—Paint Hardware We Buy, Sell and Trade IDEAL FURNITURE MART tSll-13 North 24th— 24th & T jke —WEhster 2224— “Everything For The Home” as time goes en Give him up now before you get so deeply involved that you will have no choice. Crocheted Sweater _ jj Make this article at Home Fe: romplete instructions send a self iddressed, stamped envelope to the Reader’s Department of this pacer. SMALL ITEM TO CROCHET Charming Shirley Allen whose face has become quite famous around America as she has pur sued her profession as a model re cently did a modeling stint for Neil Scott & Associates. Miss Al ien s face has appeared in many of the current ads now appearing under the sponsorship of large cororations in Negro newsapers. In the above picture Miss Allen wears a simple crocheted sweater with an embroidered neck. It looks amazingly well on Miss Allen and it would appear to just as good an advantage on you. You can learn to make this stunning number for yourself by sending a stamped self-addressed envelop to this pa per's Fashion Editor at once. S BOOK REVIEW “The Glass House of Prejudice” . . “Glass House of Prejudice", a book written by Dorothy W. Ba ruch for young adults, which was recently published by William Mor row and Company, treats scienti fically, yet humanly, the disease of race hate and discrimination and the resulting bitterness that wells up in the souls of those who oppressed as well as the oppres sor. Dr. Baruch, a consulting psych ologist, who holds fellowship in such organizations as the Ameri can Orthopsychiatric Association; American Psychological Associa tion; American Association of Ap plied Psychology (Consulting and Clinical Sections), Western Psych ological Association and American Group Therapy Association; diag noses the American ‘‘illness’’ and then, like a skilled surgeon, cuts away the diseased tissue to lay bare the cause of infection. “The disease of hate”, says the author, “is a disease to which peo ple have not yet become immune. It is a disease of the human mind which people, by and large, have not yet learned to control. To un derstand it and to keep it from spreading and from destroying our integration and peace, we must at tack it in much the same way as we would attack a disease of the body. .The same method should be applied to the emotional disease of intolerance and enmity between people. We must first deal with the outward signs.. with the story of people. We begin to see how the very same feelings that motivate injustice and oppression also func tion. under different names, in the violence and aggression with which people attack and counterattack. As we see what is happening to people, we are actually examining the disease in action. We find out how it shows up in people and against people, and how they hit out in return”. Of those who answer to the name liberal and render lip service only, the author declares: “The person who sits by, feeling that racial discrimination is not his concern, strengthens its po wer.” “GLASS HOUSE OF PEEJU 3,000,000 Children in Sfchool Lunch Proqram ALL STATES SIGNED Agreements covering the opera tion of the National School Lunch Program have been signed by the Department of Agriculture and each of the 48 States, the District of Columbia and the territories. Completion of the agreements will insure nation-wide participa tion in the program during the 1946-47 school year, .the first year of operation under the permanent school lunch legislation which was signed by the President last June. At least eight million boys and girls will get school lunches under the cooperative program during the year, according to estimates by the Production and Marketing Administration, the agency of the Department which af«T ■PwoajE *1V -/ou M5H ' InrlFB ~ Y Vro J 1 ^ —"Mg tUUKLEBERRY~FTlSN Ikl.-S MOTHER, ’ ~ • (5G'0='Q.-: icMDS HlW\ OH -afe-yfl ••'■ IW®™W<» if. >- -ilk ' aU*Rl!RVC*^^'~'> KISSES KELLIE «/ DRUG STORE ° tl» ftno GETS SLftPPeP :; .V^oh&foR *T. A %'refe**,o ;' r : •* _ * ' ' ■" • ■'• SET-.. ^ ' ' C^e’ __ xceciieAws_«-£_ DICE” deals with discrimination as directed aga’inst ALL minori ties, and through personal experi ences of people in these racial groupings, the reader is allowed tp observe the corroding process of hate at work. The writer not only discusses ef fects and causes of prejudice, she also suggests certain ‘cures’. After reading “Glass House of Prejudice”, the Negro who trans fers his resentment and hostility to the “Jew”, the Mexican who takes his grievances out on the “blacks” and the Jewish man or woman who gets even by kicking the Negro will better understand why they are as they are and that, as Dorothy W. Baruch says: “We must work together and fight together to create a better life for all the people of our land”. “Glass House of Prejudice” is a beacon which can help a sick and prejudice-ridden America cut aw’ay the cancerous growrth of prejudice and justify, in the eyes of all men its right to be called “land of the free.” RUMOR THAT GERMAN BUND FORMING ALLIANCE WITH THE KU KLUX KLAN WASHINGTON, D. C. (CNS)— It has been reported that the old German-American Bund is renew ing its activities and forming an alliance with the Ku Klux Klan. The Justice Department, thru its Internal Security Division, has picked up the report and is pro ceeding to investigate the rumors. The Internal Security Division is completely charged with surveil lance over potentially subversive organizations and individuals. JIM STEELE By MELVIN TAPL*7 > f\k PR AVMC4U Ky/a ^ia&si No rn: “KAO)££ IMTJ.;cACK,IZSKS ■ mpcwsf'^rtk; yO&OV&ED fc Pi^APPcAR -AN CDWNTH& * >’ &PATHINPJR : r/nicYRNPu-E !'• /ASA'/.v/s > • i :• :OL£SA.A ...j !i'•£ JUM6L&. | ^ C . ‘Ti.v; MTNi. K-s-. pC *. | BREEZY' ByT.MCLVIN . _____————-—-m • j:--7 \wlrrr~.——r--var^^nl /HOWCCmb YWkfc RUSHIN - YUU Vt HbiW IH/AI ^ VVBU-,UU^h/■ vvt What new ghrl,mary, in > mary hap a little 1 [haven't been abley^ OUR CLA9; - CARRYING HAVEN'T VOU^A TO EVEN OET A -SOUP her book^all theW< />--7yv Ibone IN A MONTH ATJ DO’S AND DON‘TS: “It’s expected of you Chum. You’re suppose to help her on or off the various means of transportation.” TAN TOPICS CHARLES ALLEN ) / » S -- ~ ' —— IW ■ ■ I A 'll ^ i--——j L' A1(F- 6USSSSTEO «Y r - _ - MK CHt.OU.lM COKTIK4SMTAU PiATun.es * -— “Either you find someone to look after that baby Mr! Smith, or look for another job !’* "Next Door” *y ted shearer r~iK_- ' ” ! ^ * * . 1 4 I. “Didn’t I tell you to wait ’til the tub ie delivered . !!!”