PROBLEMS HUMANITY 4 Editor's Note:— Submit your jobless for publication to ABBE' WALLACE, invars of this n«spap«^%^01vs your full nose, ad dress and nrthdatq. F&r a 'pMvftw TXply" send Abbs'a stamped envelope aifd twenty-five cents for oae of hlc new and Inspiring •LESSONS FOR HAPPKB LIVING. • Your letter will be treated sonfldentlally. Send 2S cents In coin, stasps or money order. Address your letter to: The fRBE* 'WALLACE Service, in ■care of. S. M.—I have been married 5 years and my wife treated me swell until recently. She ran off with another man and left me with the children to mother. I have tried to get her to return but she says she does not love me Must 1 wait for her or try to get someone else to care for the child, ren. I am crazy with worry. I love her very much. Ans: Leave the children with your mother temporarily and em ploy a competent person to help her with this added responsibility. Your wife is not as happy as she would have you think. The glam ®ur is wearing off fast and she will be ready to talk things over before many more weeks pass. L. M H.—I graduated from high school last June. I met a wonder ful fellow the first week jn June and we were attracted to each other. He claims that he loves me. I am undecided. I want to go to college but my parents are not able to send me. This man says that if 1 marry him, he will send me four years. Advise me what I should do as I really want an education. Ans: Work and earn the money for your college education. Many people work their way through school waiting tables or doing some other miscelaneous work around the school Or cam pus. You would despise yourself later on if you sold your affec tions to someone whom you did not love, to get your degree. M. W. W.—I am married to an ex G.I. and we love each other but he is so jealous he doesn’t want me to go anywhere, not even to see my mother. He has beat me twice real bad and says mean things to me all of the time I have made up my mind to leave but he says he will kill me if I do. Ans: Pack up and take off— you are not compelled to stay there and take his abuse. Better keep out of his sight for awhile until he cools off. else he may try to get tough. When he has time to think things over, he will want to change his tactics and make amends. B. L. D.—I am in love with a guy and he says he loves me. I am out of work and would like to return to my job as a beautician >■ 1 . * j LAKE SHOE SERVICE Note la The Time To Get Your Shoe* Rebuilt! Quality Material & Guaranteed Quality Work 2407 Lake Street - -/ but the thought of leaving him hurts as we are engaged. Will it be wise for me to let this come j' between me and a successful car eer. Is it worth it? Ans: Return to your job or find work there for the next few ; months. You cannot afford to loaf I just to be near your boy friend. The money you could earn be I tween now and Christmas would go a long way toward furnish 1 ings and other necessities for your apartment. Y. O.—I am and have been go ing with a man 32 who has taken up all of my time for 6 months. He asked me to marry him and made known his intentions to my parents and friends. We set the date, I bought my wedding 1 dress and as I loved himf I could hardly wait. His word and action was sincere. Now on the 1 spur of the moment, he packs, leaves town without a word to ^ anyone. I have never known such embarrassment and humiliation because the way I look at it, I hare been jilted. Ans: That’s precisely the case ^ the bubble of romance burst and j he fled to avoid facing the music, j Your pride has been wounded but j you need suffer an embarrass ment as it wwas to your advant- | age to find out his true feelings before you became any deeper in- j volved. Don't weaken and take him back when he returns home wash your hands of the whole thing and concentrate on finding someone else to take his place. C. M. C.—Seven years ago I met the only man in the world for me. A perfect gentleman, a lover and everything a girl would want in a man. I had my career j and did not care to get married j he was very Insistent, worried . me nearly to death, but I had ^ everything I thought I wanted. ■ Recently he has not been the same, he sees me regularly, is a marvelous companion but I know he has other women. He insists that he doesn’t. I want to marry him now but he isn’t ready. It is breaking my heart. Ans: He’s practically a con | firmed bachelor now and it will require new and varied technique | on your part if you get him to i change his mind. You can’t do it by appearing over anxious as you are right now—date a few other fellows and give him some thing to worry about as you did a few years back. Send for Hap. pier Living Lesson No. 4—How TO WIN A MAN, price 25 cents. READ THE OMAHA GUIDE f We Are Once More LAUNDERING CURTAINS • SEND OR BRING THEM IN Edholm & Sherman —LAUNDERERS & DRY CLEANERS 2401 North 24th St. Phone WE 6055 I - - - - <-—• i ——————— | —.H | ‘’$& 4*Kha Thet^ when she returns there this autumn wearing this new luggage-tan suede* weskit over her yellow silk shirt with French cuffs. At Mar shall Field & Company's college shop, called "Campus Junction” this year, she wear* s cocoa gabar dine Tii.fi. •• Rented M 'r* -i"' - .i? in fr-c- T i Co I -- Refinishing Cabinets If the oldffinish of a metal Idtchen I cabinet is not#scratched or chipped, a thorough'cleaning to remove any traces of greasy filfn, followed by a light .rubbing with very fine sand paper to dull the glass of the old •name], should be sufficient (repa ration for refinishing. After Wiping v^th turpentine or mineral ‘spirits, apply one or ^two coats of enamel undercoater, in accordance With the manufacturer’s directions on the can, and finish with a aoat of enamel of th^desired tint. rami Pradaciian From the top third of the nation’a farms comes SO per cent of the total production; from the other two thirds. 20 per cent. Many mothers have won lered ii it were advisable to store baby’s left-over foods in the cans they ‘come in. Well, I’d like to tell you what the United States Department of Agriculture says on this subject: 1 “It is iust as safe to keep canned l food in the can it comes in—if the can is kept cool and covered—as it is to empty the food into another container. Cans and the food in them are sterilized in the canning process, but the dish irito which the food might be emptied is far I from sterile. In other words, it is likely to have on it bacteria that causes food spoilage.” * 1 '■‘Babies today are probably get ting'better footj than eould be pre pared by average home methods. Each can container in which baby food is packed is like a miniature pressure cooker irf which the fo?d is cooked with all the goodness and food values sealed in. And they stay sealed in until you open the can for baby’s meal. ’i' There is a 'great variety -of oaftned 'foods available fpr babies today . . . cereals, fruits, vege tables, soups and meats. Meat, you know, gives baby the extra pro telns and iron he needs for proper growth—arid introduces him fo one of the good foodfe he’ll be eating all his life. - _ ' MICHIGAN'S GOVERNOR URGED TO STOP USING STATE TROPPERS FOR STRIKEBREAKING NEW YORK CITY — Governor Kim Sigler of Michigan, who in re cent weeks has called out state troopers to break strikes of the United Auto Workers-CIO at Ben ton Harbor. Clinton and Dowag iac, was urged by the Workers Defense League to stop using the troopers for this purpose. “The pattern you have establish ed by calling out state troopers on three occasions makes anti labor goon squads out of an agency of government,'’ Rev. Don aid Harrington, national WDL chairman wired the governor. *3weet Sea’ The Amazon river is som*tim#a • -iawo as tha "svfeet sea.” ITS POSSIBLE WITH PAINT by Ray Hookway ! _—-— WHITE MINT ON EDOEtf OF DARK CELLAR STAIRS ' , WAV PREVENT A j A PAINTED STONES OUTLINE THIS GARAGE-TO-HOUSE >>PATH AT NIGHT " SIMPLE PAlHT dOg WARNS OF STEEP STAIRWAY AHEAD _ ,u WWT6D TO MATCH , . THE WALLS, RADI ATORfl 0EEM TO PI8ATPEAR 6AV COLORS IN v NOEPITAL ROOMS SPEED-UP ^ CONVALESCENCE *€w*r.\ * . iV '*CplOX CD*tSis £ TAJVf *04 ST*£*!¥/**-A*& I Here Are Easy Ways to Make School Lunch Menus Appetizing REPORT cards and lunch menus are often closely related and you may be able to build up your child's scholastic standing by pack ing nourishing and appetizing meals for him to take to school. Meat, cheese and eggs for sand wich fillings, milk or cocoa In a vacuum bottle, fruit and a simple cake or cookie make a high nutri tion basic menu that can 'be varied enough to avoid monoto^. Cookies take only a few minutes to make if you use magically fail ure-proof recipes calling for sweet ened condensed milk, a creamy smooth blend of fresh, whole milk and sugar. These crunchy cookies require neither eggs, shortening, sugar, or flour, and they are so easy to make that the children them selves can accomplish them. Vary the kind of bread used in sandwiches, and sometimes use very small rolls, split, and put together with the filling. Wrap fruit, sand wiches and cookies separately, and remember to tuck a paper eup for milk in the box. If milk is obtain able at school, then you can occa sionally use the vacuum bottle for soup. •Magic Six-Way Cookies T < ups (IT. i.z, can) sweetened ton , 'yf-d milk ■ ■ "t butter >Any one of the 6 ingredients list ed below: (1) 2 cups raisins (2) 2 cups corn flakes * (3) 2 sups bran flakes t (4) 1 cup chopped nut meats (5) 2 cups chopped dates (6) 3 cups coconut Mix sweetened condensed milk, peanut butter, and any one of the 6 ingredients listed above. Drop by spoonfuls cm greased baking sheet. Bake in moderately hot oven (375* F.) 15 minutes or until brown. Re* move from pan at once. Makes about 30. Magic Molasses Brownies 1% cups (IS ox. can) sweetened con* densed milk 14 cup molasses • 2 cups graham cracker crumbs 1 cup chopped nut meats Mix sweetened condensed milk and molasses in heavy pan and cook over low heat 5 minutes or until mixture thickens, stirring con stantly. Remove from heat. Add graham cracker crumbs and chop ped nut meats, blending thoroughly. Spread mixture in pan (8 by 12 inches) lined with waxed paper. Bake in moderate oven (350° F.) 15 minutes or until brown. Turn from pan and femove paper at once. > Cut in 2-Inch squares. Makes a’?o’.it fl l QUEENS DON’T HAND MILKI> ! SPRINGFIELD, ILL.—Farmer's rife Ruby Shipley scratched “hand , nilking” off her husband’s list of . :hores since she reigned as "Queen ■ For a Day” on the radio program if that name at the Illinois State air. As one of the prizes she re* ; :eived a modern Sfirge milking nachjhe. Jack Bailey, master of :ercr.ionies for the show, here lemonstrates the labor saving fea gres of the new milker for the term “Queen For a Day.” ANNUAL CONVENTION • F VIRGINIA TEACHERS TO BE HELD OCT. 16-17- 18 RICHMOND. Va.. — Marking 1 sixty years of effective service to Virginia teachers and the general ! well being of the Commonwealth, the Virginia Association for Edu cation will observe this important anniversary October 16-17. s$nd 18 at sessions to bbe held at Virginia Union University "%i Richmond. For many years the annual con ventions of Virginia teachers were held at Thanksgiving, but popular requests of educators brought about the change. All meetings—general, business and departmental—will be held in the university's Belgian Building. Of modernistic architecture, this 1 building is spacious enough and has facilities to accommodate the entire gathering. The sessions will mark the first full use of the structure, a gift of the Belgian Government, since Virginia Union reassumed control of the building, which was used by the United States during the war as an induction center. Speakers of national and inter national reputation have been ex tended invitations to attend. Dr. Charles E. Rochelle, secretary treasurer of the Indiana State Board of Education; and Alder man Kenneth R. Williams, mem- , her of the city council of Wfnston. Salem, North Carolina arg sched uled to address two of the ses sions. Organized in 1887 The VAE was organized on Au gust 13. 1887 with James Hugo •Tohnston as first president. Tak ing note of this fact the program arrangers invited his distinguish ed son, Dr. James Hugo Johnston, dean of Virginia State College, to address the convention on the year’s central theme: “Building Improved Standards f«r Educa tion.” In many communities there are smoke ordinances which place al (curb upon the smoke nuisance. In-* a^much as most of this smoke originates from * highly volatile^ tar-frlled coals, these ordinances; usually require special controls in the burning of such soft coals. Automatic stokers are considered to be the best way of keeping the smoke down to a minimum. \ There is no questioning the fact that smoke is a horrid nuisance, and that you do not want your chimney to be guilty of belching forth a lot of thisi dirty earbon black. .Ordinance or not, you don’t like to see such a waste of fuel. The whole solqjion, of course, lies’ In the eombustion process of your beating plant, and if you are at all troubled wkh excessive coal smoke the thing to do is call in a qualified combpstion specialist and? let him make recommendations for Cor recting the cause. >■ * * • j It is not always the coal that is at fault, and before ybu^blafne The coal dealer be sure your heating plant is without fault. A bad chimney, a soot-dogged furnace, poor combustion due to numerous causes, may well need correcting. An expert in heating service will readily determine the reasons fo* a smoky furnace and tell you how ; to overcome the difficulties. Thera are companies that make it a regu lar part of their heating business fo clean and. re-set furnaces, and It should be a yearly habit of yours to have your furnace checked against smoke and aU other troubles. ’ * LINCOLN UNI. MO.) ADD8 SECOND WILBERFORCE TEAM TO SCHEDULE JEFFERSON CITY Mo.—Plans have been completed for the opening contest of the Lincoln University (Mo.) Tigers with the Incorporated Church-supported Wilberforce University team, co ached by Dwight Fisher, on Sept. 27 in Jefferson Ciey. From all in. dications this game will present strong opposition for each of the teams as a season’s opener. Cocah David Rains and Charles. Ex um are sending the squad of about 25 men through preliminary con ditioning drills daily. They will be joined by Assistant Coach Charles Hoard within a few days. Coach Rains, reluctant to make any predictions, seemed gratified with the showing of those report ing. Despite the loss of Pete Saund ers, quarterback, Khamalaw White backfield, by graduation, as wg!L as Lewis Polk, center, who re portedly will not return this sea son, the squaid includes several, returned letter men among which Floyd Campbell, tackle and Her bert Price, guard, show prospects as regulars. READ THE OMAHA GUIDE >