PROBLEMS HUMANITY ik h Editor's Not*:- Subnit your probleas for publication to ABBE' WALLACE. In car* ot this noMpaper. Civ* your full naae. ad dress and blrth'date. For a ’private .reply" send Abbe'a staaped anvslope and twenty-five cents for on* of bis new and inspiring ■LESSONS FOR HAPPJER LIVING." Your letter will be treated •onfldentlally. Send 25 cents in coin, staaps or aoney order. Address your letter to: The t'RBE* WALLACE Servlee. in oar* ot. C. G.—I have been married 31 , months and can’t make up my j mind to stay with my wife. I love her but seems like I can’t stay there and be satisfied. I tell her I am going to do better and as soon as I leave her, I go right back to the woman I used to go with. I know I don’t love thl3 woman and I want to know what to do to leave her alone? Ans: Spend your evenings in the presence of your wife *nd the temptation to visit the other ■woman will not be so great. Should your money run short, the other woman would suddenly lose all interest in you. You love your wife—change your ways be iore it is too late. Z. C. B.—I am strongly con sidering selling the old home place as I am an only child and Y am permanently located here in the city in a home of my own. J It requires too much of my time going back and forth looking af- j ter the property. Would it be wise to sell? Ans: There is no reason why you should not dispose of the property if you find it a burden and worry. Put it up for sale. It won't be difficult to find a buyer as the property is very desirable and in a good location. N. O, L.—I am coming to you. "hoping you can help me with my girl friend. She is a nice girl in •every respect but she likes to drink and when she drinks, she Tuns around with men. I want you to let me know what to do about her ? Ans: Don't take her seriously as long as she drinks and runs around. She couldn’t be in love ■with you and behave in this man SPECIAL GET ACQUAINTED OFFER— 3 Beautiful 5x7 LIFE LIKE PORTRAITS (in Folders) *2.50 PHOTOGRAPHIC GREETING CARDS From Your Negative $1.50 We Make Negative $2.00 _STUDIO OPEN— Evenings 7:30 - 9:30 Sundays 10 a. m.-3:30 p. m. TRIANGLE PHOTO SHOP 1608 N. 24th St. . ner. Insist on her going on the water wagon else you had better look for a new girl friend on which to center your interest. F. I.—My husband and I have been separated two months just because his mother and I couldn’t get along. His mother said as long as she lived, he was go ing to listen to what she said and after she passed, I could take over. What am I to do? Ans: Get in touch with your husband and have him come where you are to live. You can find happiness if you live in an apartment away from his folks but a divorce is inevitable if you return to him there in his mother’s home. P. C.—I am having lots of mis fortune here lately. A man is try ing to buy the place where I’m renting. He has a place of his j own but dislikes us very much. | Is there anything we can do to keep him from getting it? Ans: No. not unless you swing ^ a deal and buy the property your self. You are only renting and the owner has perfect right to sell at any time and to any one whom he choses. B. N. C.—I correrponded with a fellow from Chicago fro 18 months. He convinced me that he was serious and asked that I come there and we would get married. I made all my arrange ments to wed and arrived in Chi cago the 15th of July. We were to marry immediately. He put it off. day by day for a week so I packed my thinsrs and came home. Did I do right? Ans: Indeed you did. He did not live up to his promises and you were wise to break away as you did and return home. Con sider the engagement broken. It worked out for the best as it j would have been a big shock had you proceeded with your plans only to find out that he did not love you. Sav you Saw it adv®rtia®d in The Omaha Guidfe We Are Once More LAUNDERING CURTAINS • SEND OR BRING THEM IN Edholm & Sherman —LAUNDERERS & DRY CLEANERS 2401 North 24th St. Phone WE-6055 m/)& Mtantta loo& I A Labor I rogram Against Intolerance By: JOHN W. GIBSON Assistant Secretary of Labor “The Commission holds to the faith that if people are exposed to the inner truth of life of a part icular group, they will gradual ly build up respect for and under standing of it.” The above quotation is taken from the recent report of the dis tinguisheb Commission on Free dom of the Press headed by Rob ert M. Hutchins, Chancellor, Uni versity of Chicago. In the Com mission report it applied of i course, to be the publication, radio and motion picture industries with respect to faithful, factual, and representative portrayals of social and ethic groups. But even out of context this particular statement has pertinent applica tion to the problems and respon sibilities of the labor movement in connection with religious and racial tolerance. We have spoken a lot of gen j eralities about racial prejudices | and religious intolerance in the labor movement; some brave words have been uttered; count less resolutions have been passed; here and there some progress has been made. One cannot help but wonder, however, how much, in terms of the practical, work-a -day world of the trade union , members, it all means. A Negro member of the UAW, telling his story in the April 1947 issue of Ammunition, organ of the educational department of that union, thinks that workers, when they go into the plant, “bring their prejudices with them.” But, he adds, “in our un j ion they learn.” In his shop, he , felt, the program of the fair prac , tices committee was taking hold. I “down in the ‘hearts of men and women.” Is thi3 a widespread or even fairly frequent experience ? I doubt it. The organized labor I movement currently constitutes about 16 per cent of the adult population and it is reasonable to assume that it carries within it a replica of the pattern of thinking which characterizes the ! population as a whole. If this is true, then we do indeed bring our prejudices with us not only into our plants but into our stores, of fices, school rooms, and other places of work. And the resolu 1 tions, while they indicate the I fundamental decency and pro grasaivism of the labor moveii ment cannot alone fulfill their ob jective. We must implement the resolu tions with a painstaking and workable program. We start with one advantage: the character of unions themselves. While union members may be subject to the many racial and religious pre judices of the general adult popu lation: they meet regularly, they are banded together for a com mon objective and purpose, they too have the benefit of well-est ablished means of communication. Labor Reports I suggest only the board out lines of a program which is fexi ble enough to be adaptable to lo cal needs. I start with the pre mise that no effort to combat and eventually to eradicate racial and religious prejudice in the labor movement must be a part of the general program for work ers’ education. Workers’ educa tion classes which present, objec tively and accurately, interesting lectures on the following general subjects should be developed in very locality: 1. The contributions of various religious and racial groups to the American community and to the labor movement itself. 2. The origin and development of the races of mankind. 3. The origin and development of religions and religious groups. 4. A frank discussion of myths and slanders connected with rac ial and religious groups. Such lectures could be followed LAKE SHOE SERVICE Now la The Time To Get Your Shoea Rebuilt! Quality Material & Guaranteed Quality Work 2407 Lake Street up with talks by religious and racial leaders of the community talks which would be built around the economic and social problems of the particular group. Granted the reasonable success of such a program, its scope could be ex panded. The labor movement of the community officially should help initiate and participate in similar programs for the locality as a whole, through such organ i ized groups as parent-teacher as sociations and adult education classes. Looking at the articles in this series in prevent issues of Labor Reports, I find a common thread of agreement: intolerance in gen eral is a threat to labor; intoler ance on the part of labor itself is a movement toward self-destruc tion. Labor must diminish the discrepance between their resolu tions and their actions against in tolerance. The mighty organized will of the free American trade I union movement, which ih the past has been harnessed to count less social and economic reforms, must again take the lead. As in the past, it will* be a manifestation of the development and growth of the movement— true growth which comes from a stirring of the roots. And that is why, in discussing the fight a gainst in tolerance. I stress local activity so heavily. Secretaries of Evangelism Meet in Albion, Mich. I NASHVILL. Tenn., — The Na i tional Meeting of the Annual C'on j ference Secretaries of Evangel I ism of the Methodist fhurch will be held at Albion Cr’l°go, Albion. Michigan, August 25-20, it has been announced by Dr. Harry Denman, executive secretary of the Methodist General Board of Evangelism, which sponsors the meeting. Opening with a banquet at 6 p. m., Monday, August 25 over which Bishop Charles C. Selec man, resident bishop of the Dal ias(Texas) Area and President of the Board of Evangelism will pre side, the 5-day meeting will fol low a study program designed to instruct the delegates in all phases of evangelistic work. Em phasis will be placed upon the development of practical techni ques in winning persons of all ages for Christ. The program pattern will include lectures and discussion groups during the day followed by addresses each even ing. An early morning worship service will open each daily ses . sion. Among the addresses at the meeting will be one by Bishop Arthur J. Moore, resident bishop of the Atlanta (Georgia) Area, on a program of Evangelism for the next quadrennium; one by Mr. Richard W. Campbell, out standing onsurance man of At toona, Pennsylvania, who gives more than a tithe of his time to Christian work; one by Mr. Tom Spradling. St. Louis, Missouri, layman, who will speak on per sonal evangelism and who him self has secured more than 100 persons for Christ in the church last year. A considerable part of the meeting will be spent in discus sion of ways to increase the ef fectiveness of the service rend ered by the Board and its publi cations. Outstanding among the publications is The Upper Room, a booklet of daily devotions with a circulation of 2,000,000, which is printed in several foreign edi tions and in a special Braille edi tion for the blind. Other maga zines published by the Board are: Thg New Life Magazine, issued weekly for the cultivation of spiritual life; and Shepherds, which goes monthly to every Methodist pastor. The Rev. C. C. Reynolds pastor of Clair Methodist Church, Omaha Nebr. is a delegate. Seeret ot Pie Catting To cat pie easily sprinkle granu l^ad sugar over (be maria^ie torrwd rrfe ROSE Beauty Salon ! Now located at 2219 Maple Street -PHONE: JAckson J610 Open from 10 A. M. to 6 P. M. Each Week Day. Featuring AN INTRODUCTORY OFFERING,_ A Series of Three Scalp Treatments Mrs. Rose Lucky Johnson formerly operated a Beenty Salon at 2408 Erakine Street OPERATORS: MRS. REBECCA EVANS, mrs. edna McDonald, MRS. RB8E LUCKY JOHNSON, Prap. I . I | Electric Bath Towel? ^-ST. LOUIS, MO>—Paula McCance, 21-year-old model, drying her iwnn suit with a new type bagless vacuum cleat, r which sucks on Water and other liquids as well as dry dirt. ™ inventor of the device, H. J. McAllister of Wheaton, DL, says; Now the housewife can launder her upholstered furniture nuns *ne dry them m naif an fconr.** •y DR. H. W. SCHULTZ, Nutritionist (Swift Research laboratories) When Vaby reaches the ages of 5 or 6 months, he’s apt to snow a desire to feed hiniself. If your baby reaches for his own spoon or cup, it’s a wise'idea to encourage him. Show him how to hold his tiny spoon . . . help to grip his cup —and then let him enjoy his inde pendence. Of course, he’ll soon iearn. 1 During the learning process, you may want to feed baby at more frequent intervals—to make sure he gets the right amount of food. Each one of the foods recommended to you by your doctor plays an important part in baby’s growth and development, you know. Milk has been called man’s most complete food—but even milk does not supply all the essential food nutrients. Therefore, early in baby's life—other foods must be introduoed. For instance: Cod liver oil for vitamin D . . . orange juice for vitamin C. Solid foods—cereals, strained vegetables and fruits should J)e added as soem as your baby qan handle them. Meat, too, is an important addition to baby’s diet, because it is so rich in pro teins, niacin and iron. Then too, meat has a different texture from baby’s other foods . . . and by feeding meat early in baby’s life, you acquaint him with one of the good foods he’ll be eating all his Check with your doctor; he’ll tell you when your baby is ready for his strained meats, fruits and vesretables. WDL ASKS FEDERAL ACTION TO RESTORE CIVIL RIGHTS IN JERSEY NEW YORK — Turner Smith, head of the U. S. Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Section,'has been urged to “restore civil rights in Fort Lee and Cliffside, New Jersey where for two successive Sundays police and Palisades Park guards have main tained a Mississippi-tyle reign of terror.” The request for federal inter ventioin same Rowland Watts, acting National Secretary of the Workers Defense League when the New Jersey attorney general failed to act. "On August 3 eleven members of an interracial group were beat en up and then arrested for mere ly exercising their civil rights,” Watts wrote Smith. "Seven were arrested at the pool’s entrance after being refused admittance. The other four were arrested out side the Park while picketing and distributing leaflets protesting the pool s ban on Negroes. Members of the group not arrested were also manhandled. "Among the seven seized at the pool’s entrance was our news ed itor, James Peck, who was blood ied up by a Park guard whil two policemen were hauling him in to police car. Inside the police car, right in front of Peck, a I policeman blackjacked Morris Horowitz, who also arrested.’’ Watts recalled how, thg pre vious Sunday, six members of the group were manhandled and for cibly deported to New York and how Samuel Scott, a Negro, wa3 blackjacked. He also pointed out that on both occasions Irving Rosenthal, the pool’s owner and Fred Stengel. Fort Lee police chief, supervised operations. Eye ours Worta To tempt potential husbands j many maidens in the Orient, espe cially in Asia Minor, build up nice dowries by weaving rugs. With their earaiags they buy perforated gold coins, which they waarv as aecklaoes around their necks so Mat a young village buck, at a 4«ca- can eyatete a Mil’s war*. COOL CHECK . I THIS charming yellow dress is “different” because of its un- ' usual shirred bodipe and short dol- j man-type sleeves. There’s style news, too, in the fine one-denier fabric ' made of Avisco rayon. It’s cool, j (serviceable, and washable. If you would like new, helpful dress-buying tips, send a stamped, self-addressed envelope to the women’s department of this paper for the free leaflet, "How to Judge Fit and Workman ship in a Rayon Dress." , j Isn’t it amazing the amount of real knowledge small children ac cumulate and retain? The other morning my two sons helped mete prepare breakfast, and, when I started making toast, I asked 8 , year-old John to put the rest of the brefd away. Well, David — only 5 years old — frery importantly took the loaf from John, carefully re-closed the waxed paper wrap ping, and then put the loaf into the bread box. ***. | As he did so, I was amused to hear him explain to John that the i waxed paper wrapping kept the i bread fresh and moist . . . and , that it should always be carefully re-closed after the loaf has been opened. David told John that j "Mike”—the man who delivers for • the bakery—had told him all about : it. Well, I've explained it to my children dozens of times — but it | took Mike — idol of every child in the neighborhood — to turn the trick! . .if V - i Later, at breakfast when the boys served our cereal, John noticed the inner wrapping on the cereal box-and I explained to him that while waxed paper keeps moist products moist (such as bread) it also keeps dry products dry (such as cereals). Therefore the lining in the cereal box should be just as carefully closed as the bread wrapper. I went on to tell the boys that food manufacturer* and bakers do their utmost to in sure freshness in foods — but, of course they can’t guarantee fresh ness to us after we open our pack* ages, therefore it is extremely im« portant that we properly re-cloa* the wrapper. It is important, too, that wh remember airtight re-clo sure can only be made when the ] package has been opened carefully without being tom. • -* ***, * i Well, when I had finished ex* plaining, the boys concluded (a* aH we housewives already know) that waxed paper plays a very important role in helping to pro tect our foods and in saving montfy, too. Lh* safe Potato One potato will supply IN oal» ries or about one twenty-fifth of the amount at calories recommended tor the average adult far daily cob sumption. rfowevar, tt is essential that a balanced ra-tion b* utilized. Here’s A Gala Dessert Cake That Adds Glamour To Midsummer Dinner FIOM the first strawberry to the last peach, all summer long, fresh fruits offer a tempting choice for good . eating. Just as they are. they’re delicious; but serve any of them. to this novel, cake and you have n really gala dessert. ...The cake Is made with cake flour, so it’s sure to be fluffy and feather -weight It’s easy to make, too. Just one layer, made by the mix-easy method, with only three mlnutee’ beating time. Yon can make it ia the morning, ahead of the heat or Just long enough before dinner to give It a chance to cool. All hinds of berries as well as sliced peaches make a delicious top ping for. thia .icake.. If you use peaches,‘ slice v them' just before dinner, sprinkle them with sugar, jnnd put them in the refrigerator. Two of these'cakes, topped- with [two different fruits, make attrac ;tlve take-your-cholce refreshments |for an informal summer party. .Serve with iced or hot coffee. ,'Fruit Cream Topping y Combine 1 cup crushed fresh ber ries or sliced peaches with 3 to 4 tablespoons sugar; let stand 10 min jutes. Fold into 1 cup cream, whipped. Summer Dessert Cake* 1 cup sifted cake flour . 1 1/2 teaspoons double-acting baking) powder , ' 1/2 teaspoon salt 2/1 cup sugar 4 tablespoons shortening •Milk (see below tor amount) ■* 1 egg, unbeaten 1/3 teaspoon vanilla •With butter, margarine, or lard use! H cup ,milk minus 1 tablespoon. With! vegetable or any oth«A shortening use) H cup milk. Sift flour once; measure into gift? er with baking powder, salt, an