Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19?? | View Entire Issue (Nov. 16, 1946)
Classified Ads Get Results! ' • * *+ * * + ' ' Would Like to Buy 39 to 42 model i OR SALE—Nice 5 Room House on Emmett. Information at 2509 Maple SL _ Plain C jwing of all kinds, 2813 Parker Street.__ Men’s full dress suit with tails three v its, white shirt and tie. finest quality, worn once, waist 41 incher trouse's 31 inches. $30.00 GL. 4Cu5. __ ___ __ f?OOSrr*.R AND 11Z N S for SALE REASONABLE. 25C9 Mar.le St. BUV A LOT in Bedford Park, b. auty s"ct of our community. Call J A-7718._ S Mi Ursili ,,n*:liM-ta Or<ter Takrp at 2'»<k* liupilpttp M.. J \rkson 72154. — Mm. C. M Uiirr. HOME LAUNDRY WANTED! We Specialize in Flat Work and Ruff-Dryed Bundles. We M:*id and Sew on Buttons. • PERRY HOME LAUNDRY 1110J*orth 23rd St. AT-5623 • A l 70S W i% FED! s/ l.l. I S ) Of /; rut KHi CASH! • V> t Mill come to your home. Fred King Motors AT-S-163 2056 F;;rnam neighbor norm fi bvtti he i. ClilTHlXn JtHBP BIG SALE «iveifonu ati IBioea. X* Stamp* Ladle* i Rusts, Tied*. Gas Stoves and U. Stoves "We buy and Sell" — TEL tT. IIW »7is \ *«»*, <17 car from private party. WA-82S9 . ioiJo . t- OR SALE, 2632“WI RT ST. ATIantic 4827. _ GAP. V3E FOR RENT. Suitable for Reoair Shop, 2517 Grant St., ATIantic 0604. ROOM for Widow or Man and Wife—Call JA. 3315._ TED RENT One or two Rooms for two ladies. ,r ct 5'39._ Wanted to Rent a house or apart rjtn‘.. CaM WE. 3343 or AT. 1296. A Life size Boy Doll for Sale, Call WEbster 3732. WANTED! Wanted to rent a 3 room apart ment furnished. Man and wife, no children Call WE. 2235. Seeks Witnesses Would Parties whom saw accidef t of Alberta Norman on Crosstov n c'- at twenty-fourth & Lake Sts., on Sept. 29. please call WE. 275s. 'H'CKEN DINNERS MARY’S CHICKEN HUT 2722 N ’Oth St... JA. 8946. Our Chicken Dinners are Something to Crow A bout. Robt. Jones. Pronr. [ —--- - —— DAY NURSERY Mother’s Care 2537 Patrick, JAckson 0559. I M!HIB< A CLBt\RR« KHIIOI.M A «HEHMl> Mill \„rth C f lb WE. IWMlr Piano, bed. misc. furniture, <704 S. 26th St. VIA-1006. '-V/ Vetr & list'd Furniture Complete Line—Pamt Hardware We Buy, Sell and Trade IDEAL FURNITURE MART iSli-13 North 24th— 24th & Lake —WEbster 2224—• “Everxtkma For The Home" --. —'.. ... ... ... . ,,l*,ION COLUMN WH II Cl N TNE TIOUILID IN MINP AND MIIIT can I EH COUNSEL AND SUIDANCI awe pen (m when your mind ■ weighted down with worry »*— write Y-or^b.m^di ^'«*riTj5*i«e0^1 °f *f and«™f»>d>°X friend ettppieg at the column with your lettir^XW **** P*p*r fr®' • just include B wTU^ei't/.':^/10^' «*S5o whS ■town Plane# arnd a aiam’^d^iieT1 cc,“tr,**t,T* »d,‘« analyaing three (II qn» ^ ssms/ss & aamr geabicma within the reaim of reaaon. Write to ■■■ THE ABBE' WALLACE SERVICE P. 0. Box II- Atlanta 1, Georgia E M M—My boyfriend has an other girl too. I’m wondering if he cares very deeply for me as he claims? Am I making a mistake in phoning him? Ana: You would profTt more by flaunting a new boy friend in his face than worrying him to death with your phone calls. Men still like to consider themselves the pursuers it flatters their ego tern poranly for a gal to phone them, but it soona grows tiresome. Don't keep it up. C. B.—Shall I be his girl friend in the manner he frequently asks? Ana: No. not on his terms. He’s ' Interested in you for one thing, .a purely selfish reason. There is no deep devotion on his part he would have you believe. , C. R—Tell me If the man I’m with loves me? I try hard to please him and it may be my fault He promised to marry me but each time he puts it off. Sometimes I feel as if he hates me. What's wrong? Ans: You put the cart before _Mth X l ake "t-. J> PRESCRIPTIONS Free Delivery —WE-0609-— Duffy Pharmacy Those occasional nights whan ner *oua tension keeps you swake—are you more wakeful the harder you try eleep? Those days when tense nerves make you irritable and jumpy ■.—***• you crankier and more restless jxsi try to fight the feeling? A#tie* Verrins can help you on days and nights like these. It has been making good for more than 60 years. caution — use only as directed. Get Miles Nervine at your drug Kora. Effervescent tab leU, 35c, 75c —Liquid, 35c. 31. Miles Labora tories. Inc., Elkhart. a the horse and naturally got off to a very bad, start in life. Trial marriages have no real founda tion and just can’t withstand the responsibilities heaped upon it. Face the facts. If you are getting nowhere, you had better call it quits and build a new life for yourself. Next time, see the prea cher before you begin living with a man. C. B. S.—Will you please help me? All my friends tell me I have a lovely figure but my skin is in bad shape. I know that it ruins me. I have tried everything and can’t you put me on the right road Ans: Visit your family physi cian and if he advocates further medical attention he will recom ment a skin specialist. You have access to a free clinic in your city and if you prefer go there for a diagnoses. Young people your age are inclined to eat only what they want instead of a good balanced diet and then must pay the pen alty. W. R. C.—I get so disillusioned here lately. Tell me is it worth the sacrifice I am making to send my son to school and to the mu sic classes he is attending? My new friend says it is a waste of time. Ans: The welfare of your son should be your first consideration It is certainly not a waste of time and money as long as he absorbs what he is taught. Prepare him to the best of your ability to meet the future and do not think of what you are doing in terms of sacrifice. It’s to your interest as well as his that he make good and succeeds in life. B. N. J.—I have been married 6 years. Two years ago Christmas a young man came to our neighbor hood on a visit and I met him one time. I believe I fell in love with him as I dream of the man all of the time and he is constantly on my mind. My husband is a good man but he drinks a little but what I want to know is does this man love me as much as I love him? Ans: To be painfully frank, he hasn’t given you a second thought You are making yourself perfectly miserable by harboring dreams of this young man. Turn a little of this emotonal excess your hus band's way and the results will be most gratifying. You'll forget the guy too. M. M. C.—I would appreciate your advice very much. I have a child 2 years old, I’m married. 20 and live at home. My mother will not keep my child while I work and doesn’t want his grandparents to keep him, but still she tells me that I have to pay board. The father of the baby supports him. We do not agree or get along so I feel it would be a big mistake to marry him. I wish to know if I should continue staying at home and being unhappy or take my baby to his grandparents and get me a room and go to work ? Ans: You need to go to work but you must make some satisfac tory arrangement for the care of the child before you can do so. If your mothers cannot assume this responsibility, you must employ someone to look after your child. It would be best for you to con tinue living at home if possible for your mother could supervise the DO’S AND DON‘TS: ^^AyMueieL FTHAT L'lL PAWNS j ms cure, is I It bordtrs on insult, Bud, 1 to neglect your companion while constantly praising another who isn’t even present ’’ JIM STEELE By MELVIN TAPLEY r listen" TO LEAVE THE a -as you call 1/ mysterious JSJake the A'ASAJPER/THE p‘/rHW,{2E6UtAR' ly plunders the SHIP/UBJTSOPCHIEF SR7TS' COUNTRY/ WHILE THE WIDE' BATES WHETHERTO &IVETHEUTTIE nation ASEAPORTORMCrT. JIMSSfARKVARE ASI«DT0A1D,SBM2K /^SA0OUTWE6lRLS BREEZY By T. MELVIN "hEEE COVE'S THAT ‘SMACT'yI *££EEZY WGfclNS-WA[WjJ ME 6ET EVEN WITH HIS ' I o« PI 7.^ n cVH care of your youngster without having to do the actual work and that would be a big relief for you. 3y CARL HELM NEW YORK—Sentimental sucker that 1 am, nothing quite so sym bolizes the city’s tragedy to me as a lost, homeless dog. Saw one the other day, a thin and bewildered little brown mutt, dodg ing through the thundering traffic— seeking among al' the millions just the one person he loved. Hundreds of unfamiliar legs churned past him; lucky dogs on their leashes snarled at his timid approach—tail dragging, the wan derer darted on in his hopeless quest. His end? Likely the pound. The city’s homeless cats fare bet ter—cats always do, they’ll snuggle up to anyone who’ll feed and shelter them. But where in this stony city is there a friendly back door where a lost dog can stop for a bone or a drink of water to sustain him in his search, a back yard where he can rest ?... And nothing quite so like the 600 newspaper correspondents now quartered here from all corners of the globe to report the United Na tions General Assembly meetings better symbolizes this town aa the Capital of the World. | IWCKLEIlBtRY-Fltt). | \ SQUIRE EDGEGATE-Figurf It Ou> Yoursdf-Thr Squire »> Right „„ , J BY LOUIS PICHASD 5 fMR ©oOOMi v6l> In.** ( ^roc ----—-\ ( HOTiCt THQT vou IT IS <) i.mf I ,F Hf s/EP-HED \Vl)o te ^ j.ot or Tf)(? FtTcmo to \ HERE ToDf)v you d -SWi^EsBE^c '* «£p T £u»N(,,Ji F/aD H/A. ro BE AIT „r VfTV- - I your* courtr v\nt)r sPt<w‘H: / 4 aio^t RE*irv?*- **LL , ■\/)(?GUM£«TS J A . o (—- -7 />©/.£ Hf° BE AsoUT I v- V'_<-— ioo VEA9S ©ut rt,s ; <*-*> i £?fA5o/*»A6 /i«£S ^<P£ 9Ppf?0Pfi>.l)T£ . I 7H/Mt* p f ' 1 - ": .. J I { ' ! ■ . ■ ; ' > _y _ i READ THE GREATER Omaha GUIDE Roles In Sepia Cinderella Open For Twelve Unknowns Six young women whose ap pearance qualifies them to be la dies-in-waiting to Cinderella in the forthcoming picture “Sepia Cinderella" and six young men who can cut a fine figure as gen tlemen-in-waiting to Prince Charm ing are being sought by Herald Pictures, Inc. Cameras will start turning on The Week By H. W. Smith NAACP JThe regxflar monthly meeting will be held on Sunday will be held on Sunday Nov. 17th at Cleaves Temple CME Church, 25 and Decatur St. at 3:30 pm. and we hope to have a very large attendance as the NAACP is doing a very wonderful work for the uplifting of the race and we hope to do more with the help of all law abiding citizens and all of the groups should give a helping hand. Election all over. Republicans all smiles and we all are hoping for a change in prices. One man killed and four injured as truck hoist touches wire in Omaha Nov. 7. Chicago Tribune bares grip of Reds on film industry. A reporter completed and reported an invest - tigation in the Hollywood motion picture industries. iMgnt u. s. flyers were buried that were lost n aiding Warsaw’s 44 flight on Nov. 5. A workman dangled from a rope east of the tower in the Wrigley building in Chicago while the hands of the clock almost touched him on Nov. 7. Russian foreign minister Molo tov arrived in the U. S. and was in Washington on Nov. 8. Ten former Jap busses vital to the U. S. also U. S. acts to end deadlock on Japs war levy. Trial of 22 German doctors may begin soon, the U. S. prose cuting. U. S. Congressman Tabor of N. Y. predicts a large discharging of many U. S. payrolls. U. S. aims to foil Soviets veto in war base rule. Vows to control and retain if U. N. rejects plan. W. R. Blackburn the new county surveyor of Pueblo Colo., as he was supported by S. F. Elliot who claims credit for his election. Oth er candidates claim Elliot did the campaigning. w "Sepia Cinderella”, the second large scale production on the Her aid program of all-Negro pictures early in December. The twelve candidates selected after the nation-wide search will receive transportation to New York, and will be paid for their movie appearance in accordance with standard rates. Acting exper ience is not necessary, and con testants will be judged solely on appearance and personality. The producers emphasize that this does not apply to the key roles of Cin derella and Prince Charming. These two roles can be assigned only to professionals of national reputation. However, the contest does provide a brilliant opportun ityy for twelve unknowns to step into the limelight, possibly to qua lify for stardom at some later date. Applicants should send their photographs to Herald Pictures, Inc., 1650 Broadway 19, N. Y., together with a letter specifying height, weight, and—in the case of the girls—shoe size. The con test closes midnight, Dec. 1. Herald Pictures cannot under take to return photographs sub mitted. These, however, will be kept on file, with a view to con sideration for future productions. Decision of Herald Pictures Cast ing Department will be final. Get Together By Ruth Taylor ; “Everybody talks about the weather, but nobodv does anvthing about it". Wasn’t it Mark Twain who wrote that? Well, I think we are getting just as bad about the future. I’ve listened to more de pressing conversation lately about what is going to happen. I’ve heard more people who have more I to say about how soon bad times are coming. But so far I haven’t heard many constructive, coop erative plans to counteract it— other than government ones. Oh. I know there are lots of people working to be sure that what hits won’t hit them! But they do not seem to realize that individualism means individual effort, not individual indifference to one another. We can either revert to a jungle existence and fight each other for what remains, or we can work together, pooling our resources, to expand production for all of us. Collective prosperity is not di visible. Without cooperation or collaboration (I like that latter word best because it is co-labor) we cannot get anywhere. The best plans in the world won’t work unless labor and management, small business and great corpora TAN TOPICS By CHARLES ALLEN \ I ——-- . ^ — .. , ©fljOO i I j| ■ aiicv©194’ HH—p 1 1 ' <k . | CO-f^Ti^ENTAL PCAT'.iaCS “. On second thought, 1 think ice ought to go back and get the pair we saw at the other store!. V tions, farmer and worker, consu mer and producer, government and private enterprise—whether that private enterprise be a bus iness or a labor union—get toge ther on the points they have in common, shelving their differ ences of method and developing a way of action that will bring prosperity to all. “When Crew and Captain under stand each other to the core, it takes a gale and more than a gale to put their Ship ashore”, so Kipling wrote. We are faced with a storm. A storm in which false ideas, wind storms of terrific intensity will be let loose. Only if we have complete j collaboration between all groups I in this country can we weather i the storm. We must recognize our i common ideals, our common basis I of moral and spiritual values, and from that basis work out our com mon destiny together. PORTERS OF BROTHERHOOD WIN 1ST ROUND IN FIGHT WITH A. F. WHITNEYS MEN In a mmorable decision handed down by Judge Albert L. Reeves in the District Court of the Uni ted States for the Western Divi sion of the Western District at | Kansas City, in a case of the Bro- . therhood of Sleeping Car Porters | against the Misouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad and the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen, motion by the Brotherhood of Railway trainmen to dismiss a temporary restraining order which operates to hold train porters on their jobs, and motion of the Railroad to increase injunc tive bond, were dismissed said A. Philip Randolph, International president of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters. In handing down the decision, Judge Reeves made the following statement: “A valid and subsisting contract held by the Brotherhood of Sleep ing Car Porters, is admittedly threatened and it is not denied that they would suffer irrepar able damage. In view of the ad mitted facts, the plaintiffs are not wrongfully enjoining the corpor ate defendent and the individual defendant. At this early stage of the rroceedings, and upon the admited facts, the plaintiffs have the undeniable rights to restrain the abrogation or breach of their "Next Door” £y ted shearer. *-, fZSr, J | Conti^eatcl Pe~*-*Te<i “. He’s the guy who's selling the Lord's Bulletin . UP* contract and to restrain the indi vidual defendants from endeavor to induce its abrogation or breach. Under such circumstances the plaintiffs ought not to be required to pledge additional security for iamages that might and doubtless will accrue to the corporate de fendant, but for which the plain :iffs would in no wise be respon sible or at fault”. “In view of the above, the se veral motions to dismiss and dis solve the restraining order at this stage of the proceeding will be ienied. Furthermore, the motion :o increase th injunctive bond will se overuled.” RANDOLPH WARNS AFL and CIO OF MINORITY UNITY The recent victory, in the recent election, of many anti-labor Sen ators and Congressmen, Democr atc and Republican, commitceed to the program of revising and emasculating the National Labor Relations Act, and other social and labor legislation for the pro gress and prosperity of workers and the people of the U. S. should be a lesson to the workers of this country to urge the unity of the AFL and the CIO in order to mobiilize their full power to com bat anti-labor and anti-progres sive forces. j • 4 ■ \ i M* THE ELMO COMPANY, Dept; 516 Davenport. lo«*f _1 ;