N THE REALM OF ...SPORTS... Outlook At Toug aloo Is Gloomy Tougaloo, Miss., Ch;t. 12—ANP —Gloom settled over the camp of the Tougaloo Bulldogs here this week w’hen only 25 candi dates answered the call of Coach “Buke” Williams and among this number there was such a scar city of veterans and the schedule faced is considered as one of the hardest to wade through. Setting-up and limbering up ex ercises constituted the program for the first two days but the third day found the stalwarts hard at work learning the art of block ing and tackling as well as punt ing, passing and receiving punts and passes. Captain “Bad Eyes” Jackson led the boys on the field and among the veterans of last year's squad who followed in his wake were E. G. Mason and “Cab’’ Brown, centers, Leon Jones guard. Montgomery, tackle and Bob Thompson, end. Baekfield prospects were some what brighter with Cunningham, j triple throat half, James Ander son, half, Jake Williams, quarter back and Box Tayler, all veterans of last year reported for the in itial practice in fine fettle. De spite the lack of material Coach Williams opinioned that the “Bull dogs” would be in there fighting to the end of every game. The schedule is as follow’s: Rust at Zazoo City, October 15; Dillard university at Touga loo, October 19, Okolona at Oko lona Oct. 26, Alcorn at Taugaloo, November 9, Piney Woods at Piney Woods, November 16 and Jacksonville Collegeat Jackson. November 28. Shaw Expects A Winner This Year Raleigh, N. C., Oct. 12—ANP— With the largest squad on hand in a decade, Coach Lytle of the j Shaw university Bears is hopeful of putting out a winning team this j year, according to reports from j “up on the hill.” Thirty-five huskies reported to j Coach Lytle Monday, among whom were several veterans around i whom the 1935 aggregation will be built. Practice is starting late this year and the coaches as well as the men realize that much hard work must be done if the squad is ready when the whistle blows on October 5. Listed among the “hopefuls” are Claude Govan, stellar halfback from Newark, N. J., Ira Cromwell, Rahway, N. J., and Walter Moore of Winthrop, Mass., baekfield candidates. “It’s rather difficult’’ said Coach Lytle “to mold a world beater out of almost green mater ial in the baekfield and a com paratively light line, but the men’s poise and general knowledge of fundamentals will make the job less difficult. All of the new men have received their baptism of fire in high school and the main problem will be to familiarize them with the system we are us ing.” Bell Must Develop Quarterback At Claflin Orangeburg, S. C., Oet. 12— ANP—Coach Bell at Claflin faces the herculean task of developing a capable field general and suf ficient reserves if his team is to make the expected showing this year. This fact became known here this week when the last of the regulars checked in and Mobley, the crackling little field general of last year’s squad was listed as among those missing but ac counted for; Bobley having mar ried during the summer months will not be in the fold. Lack of reserve material rivalled the problem of developing a signal barker, especially linesmen. To date Mack, from Avery high Charleston, S. C., Coo and Robin son of Voorhes and Cureton ol Greenville, S. C., are among those who have shown promise. Creighton “Blue Jays” Tackle Drake Lni. Eleven Saturday ‘‘Blue Jays” will come wing ing home to Creighton Univers i ity and to Omaha on Friday and Saturday, October 18th and ! 19th, for one of the most eolor ; ful homecoming celebrations in the school’s history, alumni of | ficers have announced. With the Drake University Creighton football game on Sat urday afternoon at 2:30 o clock affording the homecomers an op portunity to see what their new coach, All-America Marchy Schwartz has done with the Hilltoppers in the short time he has been at the helm, it is ex pected that the stadium will be filled. A parade of students and alumni downtown in the morning will lead off Saturday’s events, and the homecoming fete will close with a banquet in the even ing at the Paxton Hotel, which will be Homecoming Headquar ters. Activities of the weekend will open Friday, October 18th, with i various departmental dinners. Bridge affairs have been ar ranged for alumnae and wives of alumni that evening. | Saturday’s program also will in clude election of alumni officers, and a barbecue luncheon at the i gymnasium from noon until j 2:00 p. m. V. J. Skutt is general ehair i man. Frank E. Pellegrin is sec retary of the Creighton Univers ity Alumni Association, and can j be reached at Creighton Uni versity, Omaha, Nebraska. Fisk Singers To Go On The Air Announcement has just come from the Office of the President of Fisk University, Dr. Thomas Elsa Jones, that a contract has recently been completed for the weekly appearance I of the Fisk Jubilee Singers for the next ten months over a nationwide hook-up. The singers, under the di rection of Mrs. James A Myers, for thirty odd years a member of the group, will make these weekly broad casts over the netwprk of the Na tional Broadcasting Company. The programs will originate in the stu dios of WSM in Nashville, Tennessee. The singers, known the world over for their superb rendition of the most beautiful melodies will be heard over the air for the first time in many j months on Tuesday, October 15th. The group will be heard over NBC from 9:00 to 9:30 P. M. Few, if any musical organizations, have com manded such world recognition as have the Fisk Singers. The first band of singers set out October 6, 1871, to thrill millions upon millions of peo ple in New York, Rome, Berlin, Par is, Amsterdam and Venice. It was these singers who carried to the world the black man’s gift to music—the Negro spirituals. Many of the first songs used by the Original Jubilee Singers will be heard over the air this winter. During the period of the broad | casts the Fisk A Capella Choir un der the direction of Harold C. Schmidt will frequently be heard along with the Jubilee Singers. An other feature of the broadcasts will be the probable appearance of lead ing Fisk personalities. Attempts are bung made to have James Weldon Johnson make short talks over the ether. Autumn Tells By John C. Williams Now* the spring has come and gone, i Summer too, is fading ’w*ay, And the sun comes forth at dawn On a chilly autumn’s day. And the ground is dripping from the constant rain. But the grass is green, as yet And the trees the same remain , with a scatter’d touch of brown i At it’s withering ,drooping top And a few leaves on the ground. The first of the wintry crop. And the short day turns to night As the sky so drab and gray, Tells us in the autumn light Winter is on its w*ay . WITH THE BANDS We respectively call the attention of those critical voices, happily in the minority, who have been crying the decline and predicting the end of Duke Ellington’s musical works for the past number of years, to two quotations among many similar ones, in the excellent book on music, “Mus ic Ho”, written in England by the eminent critic, Constant Lambert. “He (Ellington)”, says Lambert, “has crystallized the popular music of our time and set up a standard by which we may judge not only other jazz composers but also those high brow* composers, w’hether American or European, who indulge in w*hat is roughly known as ‘symphonic jazz’ ”. . I know of nothing in Ravel so dextrous in treatment as the varied solos in the middle of the ebullient “Hot and Bothered” and nothing in Stravinsky* more dynamic than the final section. The combination of themes at this moment is one of the most ingenious pieces of writing in modem music”. “In A Sentimental Mood” is the title of the just-released composi tion from the prolific prize-win ning pen of Duke Ellington. It prom ises to be a fit successor, in musical content and popularity, to “Solitude” If “Dig that high-iivin' chick lay in’ her racket over at my* crib, with those conned rug-cutters” isn’t Har lemese for “Look at that ritzy miss trying to make an impression in my home with those slick-haired ball room dancers” then sue the fellow w*ho told me it was . . . The some what silly* yet vastly amusing con troversy* as to whether or not Cab ! Callow*ay* and his Cotton Club or chestra were a fit choice to play the music for the Tercentenary Ball at Concord, Mass., was self-solved by the greatest dance turnout in Con cord s history—with his hi-de-high ness supplying the dance music. . . . Lucky Millinder, dynamic leader of Mills Blue Rhythm Band, is start ing a back-of-an envelope writing club. For membership in the club write your lyric on the back of an envelope and apply to organizer Lucky .... Duke Ellington is spend ing the few and short in-between hours in developing a startling and original idea for his new revue, which he will write and produce him self, under the supervision of his sagacious sponsor, advisor and mana ger. Irving Mills . . . Toronto’s bill boards are shouting about the re booking at Shea’s of Cab Calloway and his band, with the opening sche duled for October 4th. Cab’s last vis it to the theatre w'as nothing short of a sensation and advance reports point to another record-breaking week . . . Cab and his boys are due for their extended Fanchon & Marco West Coast tour beginning October 18th . . . The life of a baton is short and merry in the hands of Lucky Millinder, dynamic leader of the Mills Blue Rhythm Band. What with Lucky’s energetic enthusiasm and gallivanting gyrations the baton death rate is astounding! . . . Ina Ray Hutton “that blonde bombshell of rhythm” and her Melodears, all girl orchestra combining charm and expert dance music, have set up a unique record in theatre annals for return engagements. Contracts have just been offered for Ina and her orchestra to play two de luxe the atres for the third time within the short period of a year! Notice, Subscribers: If you don’t get your paper by Saturday, 2 p. nu call Webster 1750. No reduction in subscriptions unless request is com plied with. Mothers—Let your boys be Guide newsboys. Send them to the Omaha Guide Office, 2418-20 Grant Street. Editor of “Foreign Affairs” Writes On War In Etriopia Writing under the title, “Inter racial .Implication of the Ethiopian Crisis”, in Foreign Affairs for Oc tober, Dr. W. E. B. DuBois ventures the prediction that the probabilities are that Italy will win in a war against the black kingdom, but that it will be a costly victory both for Italy and the ■white world. He pic tures the Negroes of the United States as being disillusioned in their hope that the white world would show any justice based on ability and ac complishment, and opines that the results of the white world’s program of economic exploitation based on the excuse of race prejudice can only be awaited. Two Paragraphs from the article: “The probabilities are that Italy, by sheer weight of aimament and with the compliance of Europe, will subdue Ethiopia. If this happens it will be a costly victory, both for Italy and the white world. There will be not only the cost in debt and death, but the whole colored world— India, China, and (Japan, Africa in Africa and in America, and all the South Seas and Indian South Ameri ca—all that vast mass of men who have felt the oppression and insults, the slavery and exploitation of white folk will say: ‘I told you so!’ There is no faith in them even toward each other. They do not believe in Chris tianity and they will never voluntari J ly recognize the essential equality of human beings or sux*render the idea of dominating the majority of men for their own selfish ends. Japan was right. The only path to freedom and equality is fox*ee, and force to the uttermost.” “Only a word needs to to be said concerning the Negroes in the United States. They have reached a point today where they have lost faith in an appeal for justice based on abili ty and accomplishment. They do not believe that their political and social rights are going to be granted by the nation so long as the advantages of exploiting them as a valuable la bor class continue. Moreover, while some of them see salvation by unit ing with the white laboring class in a forceful demand for economic emancipation, others point out that white laborers have always been just as prejudiced as white employers and today show no sign of yielding to ; reason or even to their own economic advantage. This attitude the action of Italy tends to confirm. Economic exploitation based on the excuse of race prejudice is the program of the white world. Italy states it openly and plainly. The results on the minds and actions of great groups and na tios of oppressed peoples, peoples with a grievance real or fancied, whose sorest spot, their most sensi tive feelings, is brutally attacked, can only be awaited.” The article by Dr. DuBois is one of four on Italy and Ethiopia in the October issue. Notice, Subscribers: If you don’t get your paper by Saturday, 2 p. m., call Webster 1750. No reduction in subscription unless request is com plied with. Mothers—Let your boys be Guide newsboys. Send them to the Omaha Guide Office, 2418-20 Grant Street. SIOUX FALLS SOUTH DAKOTA ; Mr. and Mrs. Charley Roberts of M aterloo, Iowa, are visitors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Collins, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Cottinger and son, the sister and brother-in-law of Mrs. Bass Booker. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Graham of Topeka, Kansas, are visiting in the Booker home en route to St. Paul, Minnesota. Rev. M. W. Withers left Wednes day for Fergus Falls, Minnesota to fill his regular 4th Sunday services there. Mrs. Susie Gaylord -who has been in charge of the gospel singing dur ing the revival at St. John’s Church returned home to St. Paul, Minnesota Tuesday, October 1st. Miss M. Glover, of the Glover Beauty Parlor, South First Ave., is leaving Thursday for a visit in Chi cago. Mrs. Arthur Williams left for a few' weeks visit in Yankton, South Dakota, with her father. Mrs. Robert Tate and Mrs. Annie Burns are on the sick list Mrs. Bass Booker, wrho has been on the sick list is much improved. Services at Pilgrim Church Sunday w'as much enjoyed. Our pastor Rev. Clayton spoke in the morning and Rev. Mack Murrin visiting min ister from Omaha spoke in the eve ning to a well filled house. His sub ject being “What Evil Has Done”. Visitors at the church were Mr. and Mrs. P. Flemings of Des Moines and Miss Alice Rolph of Huron, S. D. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Roberts, Mr. I Bob Beards, Miss Alice Rolph and j Mr. Robert Tate motored to Mitchell, S. D. to attend the Corn Palace. Mrs. Florence Turner after spend ing the summer in the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Collins returned home | at Buffalo, N. Y. Mr. H. Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs. Red en left Monday for Pierre, S. D., where Mrs. Reden will take the beau- | ty culture examination. Mrs. Nora Reynolds, Mrs. Thomas j Vance, mother and sister of Mrs. Charles Warden and Mrs. Eliza Ellis aunt of Mrs. Vann motored up Sun ! day with Rev. Clayton from Omaha to spend the day. Mr. James Moxley has returned home from New York City. He had the pleasure of seeing the Louis Baer fight. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Roberts left ' Saturday for their home at Fort I Dodge, Iowa, after spending tw’o j weeks with Mrs. E. C. Collins. Frances Anderson, 305 W. Bailey St. <3 HAIR • STRJ5CHT ttUSTROLS • LCf;G Pto%e Ire Ke*u’ts Yogi hair need not be short, •cragg'.y kinky, nor net-: U be dried oul, faded and life less For there is a vrav to overcome this poor ccnoi i tion that destroys the na ture beauty of the hair. This new different method will grow ong. usirocs glossy, silken straight hair, remove dandruff, itch, tet ter dry scalp and dried out hair condition by lubricat ing strengthening ana pro longing the life of the hair for both men and women. 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