The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, August 10, 1935, Page SIX, Image 6

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    SHARPS AND FLATS
□AMONG
THE MUSICIANS
—
Melvin Small, former pianist at
the Fontenelle Hotel Hotel, left for St,
Louis, Mo., last week enroute to
Charleston, South Carolina. He 1
plans to visit New York and other
cities of the east before returning.
All the cats felt like rehearsing
last week. We strolled in the Dream
land and thought we had blundered in
on a nudst colony. Cals reefing down
taking it iff piece by piece, trying
to keep cool.
Geno Coy is certainly g.rtt:ng
ready for the dance th. y will have
at the Elks Monday night, •' suppose
t is the Band that is so hot
In spite of the heat Tom Allen
may be found on many afternoons
arranging awn- • ac hLs desk in Mason
and Knox Cafe.
Noticu that contented look on Eli
Browns face, Yea man and h »*s get
ting fatter too.
Frank Perkins is getting so far up
that a pei son has to make appoint
ments with h s several secretares in
order to even talk to him, not really,
now we only heard.
PERSONALS-- .
Mrs. Fulwood entertained with a
-jjK
tea. Sunday, Aug. djL! in honor of
her lryother, Mrs. Niniiie Wright, who
with her neiee have been her house
guest the past three weeks. Six
guests were present and ail enjoyed
a pleasant evening.
[qOOR CHILffl
/and ran school
^ *r CV AUSI & DULAND
«"». rirmti mi NWS- timwiu
Mm /wtrj Urnr Dttmtmtm W twUjt U l.rrtu
Summer Hemt
Too many caution? cannot Co
printed against sunburn. No mat
ter how much is said or written,
no matter what one's past experi
_ ence may have been,
ene majority ox
people show unrea
sonable haste in ac
quiring a sunburn. |
“I’m going to be
tanned ljke an Indi
an,” they say, for
getting tnat tne In
dian’s red-brown skin is natural.
Children are in danger, because
they don’t know there is any dan
ger. In the summer, they have all
day for play. The release from
school is tempting, with so many
things to do. If parents aren’t
mindful and wrtehing, the first
day or two in the summer sun may
bring a serious burn. Then a week
of suffering, often confined to bed.
And it isn’t always as simple as
that. Burn from the sun is no ‘dif
ferent from any burn. It isn’t con
fined to a sore skin. Poisons, or
body toxins, are formed. The child ,
may be feverish and nauseated. In
attempting to throw off the poisons,
the kidneys may be injured. Some
times severe prostration results.
In all cases of sunburn, it is ad
visable to place a child in a physi
cian’s care. Wise treatment will
prevent the complications. But the
greatest wisdom is shown at the
beginning. Take the sunburn grad
ually, a little each day. Give the
skin a chance to tan painlessly.
Are you making your child1 s Ufa
a nightmare by insisting on regu
lar promotion at sehotl? Don't mist
Dr. Ireland’s next article.
How to Get Rid of
GRAY HAIR
Look Years Younger
When you can change your gray.;
faded, or streaked hair to its natural
youthful soft color in less than half
an hour—
And do it at home without fear of
harm to the hair—why go on looking
years older than you should look.
Rap—I—Do] is the real, original
hair colorer—18 shades to choose from
it is so supremely good that the best
beauty shops in all the large cities in
the world feature it. Rap—I—Do!
will not wash off or fade nor affect
marcell or permanent waves.
Go to any Beaton Drug Store today
and choose the shade you need—you’ll :
be a happy woman if you do—for a
long time to come.
TIRED, ACHING,
SWOLLEN FEET
Haaae’s Emerald Oil Goar an teed to
Stop All Pain and Soreness and
Banish Offensive Odors
In just one minute after an appli
cation of Emerald Oil you’ll get the
surprise of your life. Your tired,
tender, smarting, burning feet will
literally jump for joy.
No fuss, no trouble; you just ap
ply a few drops of the oil over the
sttrface of the foot night and morn
ing, or when occasion requires. Just
a little and rub it in. It’s simply
wonderful the way it ends all foot
misery, while for feet that sweat
and give off an offensive odor,
C there’s nothing better in the
world.
Moone’s Emerald Oil is
guaranteed to end your foot
troubles or money back.
Mi*, and Mrs. Edmond and family
have just returned from a two week :
vacation, visiting relatives in Tennes
see and Illinois.
—
Mrs. Louise Martin of Joplin, Mo.,
is expecting to arrive Saturday,
Aug. 10th, to spend her vacation
with Mrs. Estella Anderson of 1111
So. 8th Street.
Mrs. Lauvis Kelley and Children
of 801 Pacific Street are spending a
30 day vacation in Pensacola, Fla.
Miss Nancy Martin of Topeka,
Kansas, and her niece, Mrs. Edith
Smith were dinner guests Thursday,
Aug. 1, at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Chas. Harris, 2424 Caldwell Street.
Mrs. Nannie Wright was honored
with a lovely luncheon, July 29th at
the home of Mrs. Elsie Smith, after
which all the guests motored to Elm
wood Park where a lovely evening
was well spent. Mrs. Wright will
leave our city, Aug. 16th, for Detroit,
Michigan, to visit another daughter
and friends before going home.
Mrs. Paul Adams and Miss Edna
Johnson left for Chcago to attend
-he Louis and Levinsky fight. They
will remain a week visiting friends.
Rev. W. E. Fort, of 2622 Charles
Street, visited his home in Terrell,
.exas, on a six week vacation trip.
He also visted Dallas, Fort Worth
a;\d Bishop College also rrjide fin
jjvtensive tour through Louisana.
England to Oust
24 U. S. Chorines
London, July 31,—The fate of two
dozen American chorines was settled
Wednesday in the House of Commons
when the government announced they
would not be able to extend the girls’
present working permits.
These girls—12 from Hollywood
and 12 from New York—will thus be
required to leave England when their
present labor permits expire.
Mae West Donates
Anti-Lynch Campaign
Los Angeles. — <ANP)—Through
Clarence Muse, who sponsored a
monster benefit entertainment in
collaborate on with the N. A. A. C.
P. here at the Lincoln theatre, Mae
West, cinema star, bought eight $2
tickets to the affair and donated $100
for the support of the Costigan-Wag
ner anti lynching bill.
Drinking Leads to
Ball and Chain
Ketchikan, Alaska, Aug. 1,—Mat
“Blakie” )Jeff, arrested for drunken
ness, started toting 18 pounds of ball
and chain around Wednesday as the
first offender under the city’s “chain
gang” ordinance. The sentence is for
five days.
The “chain gang” ordinance, a
relic of early days never taken off
the statute books, was revived re
jntly to combat drunkenness an<
vagrancy.
32 Injured at
Fire Convention
Detroit, July 31.—Thirty-two
persons were injured in a demon
stration of new equipment at the
Michigan Firemen’s association
convention Wednesday. Many of
the victims wrere delegates, in
cluding several fire chiefs.
Witnesses said a pan contain
ing gasoline was placed in the
center of a room, and it ignited.
The injured were rushed to hos
pithls. Most of them received
cuts from flying glass. Several
were burned.
---■
j
Loretta Young’s
Mother is Sued
---
Los Angeles, July 31.—Charg- j
ing desertion, George W. Belzer
Wednesday filed suit for divorce
from Mrs. Gladys Royal Belzer,
mother of three screen actresses j
—Loretta Young, Sally Blane and
Polly Ann Young.
Mrs. Belzer, now in Europe,
divorced her first husband, John
E. Young and married Belzer in
1934.
Lightning Strikes Farm
Worker Near Schuyler
Schuyler, Neb., July 31—Leonard
Morrell, 20 a harvest hand, was in
serious condition in a Schuyler hos
pital Wednesday night after being,
struck by lightning while working in
a field.
Morrell wasseverelyburnedan dnot
expected to live.
The bold killed two horses hitched
to a wagon Morrell was using, demol
ishing the wagon and burning a load
of wheat “bundles.”
The accident occurred on the farm
of Joe Dudek, four miles west of
here.
North Carolina Govern
or To Push Lynching
Probe
No Credence Put In Report That
Negroes Were Inf Mob
—
Raleigh, N. C., Aug 8, (ANP)—i
A reward of $400 has been offered by
Governor Ehringhaus for the arrest
and conviction of parties responsible
for the lynching of Govan Ward, who
ran amuck at Louisburg, N. C., and
killed a 67-year-old white farmer.
In the meantime the chief executive
of the State is trying to ascertain
just why the officers of Franklin
county were so dilatory in request
ing help to prevent mob violence and
why it was impossible to recognize
any of the members of the mob, al
though they were unmasked.
The governor learned of the lynch
ing through Associated Press reports
and immediately dispatched troops to
the seene but they arrived too late to
deter the lynchers. They found the
body of the lynched man suspended
from an oak tree and a crowd of
men and women milling about the
body, expressing approval of the ac
tion of the mob and some cutting off
toes and other parts of the body for
souvenirs. In the crowd were many
young women who apparently found
much pleasure in viewing the grue
some spectacle and in praising the
“heroism” of the lynchers.
When the lynching was first re
ported it was sad that Negroes were ;
numbered among the mob, but little
credence is being put in the story
and Negro leaders themselves are
pointing to the fact that Negroes
are law-abiding and are willing at
all times to let the law take its
course and to the fact that it was
due to the act of a Negro that the
man, who has been declared insane,
was placed under arrest.
Some of the facts relative to the
lynching that are causing much com
me nt include:
1. That althoagh it was common
knowledge that mob violence was in
the making, one sheriff and two
i deputies attempted to talte the pris
oner to another county for safe
keeping.
2. That the prisoner was beaten
over the head with a blackjack by
one of the officers who attempted
to kill him by placing a gun to his
head and pulling the trigger. His
gun had been unbreached when dis- i
lodged fro mthe ,hcl|ster during a
struggle with the manacled prison
er and the bullets emptied on the
floor of the car, hence it dd not fire,
and this officer declared: “I want
ed to kill him then and there but
the others would not let me.”
3. That the officers did not ob
serve or attempt to get the numbers
of licenses on any of the cars, carry
ing lynchers.
4. That the governor was not noti
fied by the officers but instead a
band of 30 special deputies were as
signed the task of rounding up the !
lynchers.
Governor Issues Statement
In discusing the outrage, Governor
Ehringham issued the following
statement: “Two horrible crimes
have been committed in Franklin
county today. The first by an ap
parently crazed and degenerate in
dividual, the second by a mob of
supposedly responsible citizens. The
first intimation of either occurrence
came to the Governors’ office, not
through officers of the law but
through the Associated Press and
this was to the effect that the
wretched defendant had already been
taken from the officers by the mob.
“Immediately the Highway Patrol
and the National Guard received or
iel’s to do all possible to avert a
lynchng. Both acted with the utmost <
promptness and dispatch and both (
were on the scene within a remark- ‘
ably brief time, but too late to pre- 1
vent the last crime. This office also 1
with the Shsriff of Franklin county
immediately sought to get in touch ;
by long distance but could not do no. ■
Chief of Police of Louisburg and the
The Governor also called upon the
Sheriff of Vance county and urged
that they offer every possible as
sistance to prevent lynching or dis
order. No report of the first crime
or of any danger or threat of trouble
was made to this office by any of
ficer of the law of Franklin county
and no request came for assistance.
Had we received an intimation that
the transfer of the prisoner for safe
keeping was contemplated ano there
was any danger of disorder we could
have rendered prompt and construc
tive asistance, but no such informa
ton or request was forthcoming.
“Offense Against Decency”
“I deplore, of course, the original
crime, horrible in its details, but I de
plore also the second ocense against
the laws of North Carolina and pub
lic decency and feel keenly the shame
and reflection whies it has cast up
on our good name and our reputation
for orderly administration of justice.”
The crime for which Ward was
lynched was the decapitating of an
aged white man who attempted to
stop him from beatng his (Ward’s)
sister with a bottle. Ward was in
sane at the time and had attacked
two others before he killed Charles
G, Stokes, the 67 year old white far
mer. An ax was the weapon used by
thu killer.
U. P. Men Get Contract
U. P. Dining -car waiters and
cooks, through their officilas, Mr
S. C. Bell, president and Mr. Ru
fus Long, secretary, with the as
sistance of Attorney Johnson of
Los Angeles, gained their con
tract.
Aifter holding several confer
ences, finally got the contract j
signed up by Union Pacific offi-;
cials on July 9. The following
is the working schedule:
240 Hours a month.
$62 a month for waiters.
$65 for pantrymen.
$72 fojrj preservation car service.
$92.50 for waiters in charge.
Mr. Long stated to an Omaha
Guide reporter that if they did
not get all they asked for, but
had a good foundation for better
ing/.-fheirselves.
Uses Eduction
Methods To Stop
Drinking Moonshine
New Bern, N. C., Aug, 8, (ANP)
—Believing that no one who saw
how rryionshine liquor was made and
the unsanitary conditions around a
still would ever drink the liquor,
Sheriff R. B. Lane, of Craven lounty
has issued a standing invitation to
the public to accompany officers
when a raid is being conducted.
“I do not believe”, said the sheriff,
‘‘that any men or woman who ever
saw the filth, the vermin and what
not around one of these moonshine
stills could ever stomach the liquor
again so I am issuing this invitation.
We raided a still last week and the
place was infested with roaches, rats
md snakes presenting one of the
most terrible and nauseating sights
[ have ever seen.
Memphis Insurance
Case Deferred To
October Term
Memphis, Tenn., Aug 8, (AJ'JP)—
)n motion of the counsel for the
sleven defendants in the now famous
‘Insurance Probe” case Judge Mar
in deferred the trial until the Octo
>er term of court and the bonds for
he defendants were raised from
13,000 each to $10,000.
American Tennis As’sn.
To Hold Meet at Vir
ginia State College
The 19th. Aitnaul Champion
ships of the American Tennis As
sociation will be played on the
West Virginia State College, In-'
titute, W. Va., during the week of
August 19th to 24th.
Seven events are scheduled,
Men’s Singles, Women’s Singles,
Junior Singles, Girls’ Singles,
Veteran Singles, Men’s Doubles
and Women’s Doubles. All events
are open to members of the A . T.
A. and affiliated organizations.
Entry blanks can be obtained
from Gerald F. Norman, 137-62
Juniper Ave., Flushing, N. Y. En
tries close Saturday, August 17th,
and should be directed to Mr.
Norman at West Virginia State
College, Institute, W. Va.
This year is the first time that
West Virginia ha* held a Nation
al Championship and from all in
dications it will be a success. The
school officials have been labor
ing all year in an effort to make
it one big affair. They have a
patrons list of nearly 1,500 all of,
whom have subscribed for tickets.
The first patron si Mrs. Emma
Irving, a School teacher of Ray
mond City, W. Va., whose sub
scriptions was received almost a
year ago.
(With so large a list of patrons,
the attendance this year will
probably reach the high mark.
Elaborate plans have been made
to entertain the players and visi
tors during the week. The social
events afs scheduled are:
Monday—Get-together Dance.
Tuesday—Movies, feat uring
tennis play.
W ednesday — Bridge Tourna
ment.
Thursday—Boat Ride and
Dance.
Friday—A. T. A. Annual Re
ception.
Five dormitories, Dawson Hall,
McCorkle Hall, Glascock Hall,
Gore Hall and Atkinson Hall will
be available for the accomodation
of the players and visitors for the
week. For reservations, communi
cate with Prof. C. C. Hawkins,
West Virginia State College, In
stitute, W. Va. •
On Wednesday, August 21st the
Annual meeting of the American
Tennis Association will be held.
Delegates and proxies having
proper credentials will be admit
ted.
Mothers—Let your boys be Guide
newsboys. Send them to the Omaha
Guide Of free, 2418-20 Grant Street.
COULD NOT DO HER
HOUSEWORK
YWMfcIN every
^ thing you at
'' t is a burden
en you are
nervous and irri
table—at your
wit’s end—try
this medicine. It
may be just what
you neea tor extra
energy. Mrs. Charles L. Cadmus of
Trenton, New Jersey, says, "After
doing Just a little work I had to lie
down. My mother-in-law recom
mended the Vegetable Compound.
I can see a wonderful change now."
Prank Causes
Death of Man
Smithfield, N. C\, Aug. 7.
(ANP)— A playful prank on the
part of George Phillips, a white
man caused the death of Pearly
Hardee, here Tuesday when the
latter, running from the white
man, who had a small snake in his
hand, crashed into an approach
ing automobile and was instantly
killed.
Phillips told the police investi
gating the accident, that he knew
Hardee was afraid of snakes and
he was just playing with him,
when the accident occurred. Tal
madge Barnes, the driver of the
death car was released and ab
solved of all blame for the acci
dent, when witnesses, including
Phillips testified that he was not
responsible for the occurrence.
A Bold Serpent
By William Pickens
(For ANP)
The latest news reports that aS
Governor Taimadge, of Georgia,
was walking through a wheat
field, a snake, not knowing who
the human individual was, bit
him in the ankle.
That’s no news: for snakes
usually bite. Neither was Tai
madge expected to be damaged
by such contact, BUT THIS
IS NEWS: As we go to press, the
(snake has not yet died.
Dunbar Hotel Chosen
Home For Deltas
Los Angelos, Calif., Aug. 8, (ANP)
—National officers and delegates to
the national Convention of Delta
Sigma Theta sorority will be housed
in the newly renovated Hotel Dun
bar at 41st and Central avenue, it
was learned Wednesday.
Mothers—Let your boys be Guide
newsboys. Send them to the Omaha
Guide Office, 2418-20 Grant Street.
' - ■ ■ - im"
Langston Hughes
Speaks at Civic
Legue Sunday
Los Angeles, Calif., Aug 8, (ANP)
—On a brilliant program dedicated
to the late Chaurrcey Townsend,
Langston Hughes, revolutionary poet,
at a special meeting of the Los An
gles Civic League Sunday.
Mr. Hughes’ subject was “Youth at
the Crossroads”.
>Tn addition to the speaker, tributes
to tho journalistic career of Mr.
Townsend were paid by James W.
McGregor, president of the league,
and Atty. Lloyd C. Griffith.
Musical numbers were given by the
Three Brownies and Miss Clothila
Curry. Juanita Ellsworth Miller and
Alberta Mayo were in charge of the
meetings.
GROWS”
• STRAIGHT
• LUSTRGIS
• GLEAMife -J
• LONG
Let \ol ■ Wirin'
Prove tre Rc.vu *«
Youi hail need no: V '’s'" t.
acraRtrly kinky, not a. t
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leer t or there ia r w »
overcome this x>oo/ e
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This new different mptfi.nl
will grow ong. ui»j< us,
glossy silken straigh* h i r.
1 remove dandruff, ten ter.
ter. dry scalp and dri» out
hair condition by ubr cat*
ing. strengthening an- t p>
longiny the life of the ha«r
for both men and w -»■».
Send COUPON now r. re
It is too late for the Frifc.K
Treatise 7~Dar Trim u
MA L COUPON FOR p p fl p
1(0" r'v COMPANY * *■? * ii <
Dept. H-4U20S N Michigan Ckicaco III. 1
• Fleas* seud FKJsJfel Treatise i Day Tr a< 'J£- j
[ £©t sHthout ary cost at all to me.
] <
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