The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, March 06, 1937, 673rd EDITION, Page THREE, Image 3

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    Louisiana Industrial Life Insurance Company s personnel
in assembly for the company’s first “Homecoming’’ at New Or
leans. More than one hundred cities and towns were reprleseiit
en in nfeeting. Organized in 1920, the company reported decid
ed gains in 1936.
Officials of the company include Hr. Rivers Frederick, pre
sident; Dr. r. (I" C^tuzot, 1st vieaj president and secretary;'
Thomas Jeffrion, 2nd vice president; R. O. Boris, assistant secre
tary; p. C. Marshall, treasurer and Dr. R. J. Viniing, Mddienl
Director. Members of the executive includfe Dr. A. O. Lyons of
Baton Rouge and 'P. J. E. Dcpoie, in addition to Mr. JefMon
and Doctors Frederick, Creuzot and Vining.
Don’t Steep
on Left Side,
Crowds Heart
GAS PRESSURE MAY CAUSE DISCOMFORT.
RIGHT SIOE BEST.
If you toss in bed and can't sleep on
right side, try Adlerika. Just ONE
dose relieves stomach GAS pressing
on heart so you sleep soundly.
Adlerika acts on BOTH upper and
lower bowels and brings out foul
matter you would never believe was
in your system. This old matter may
have poisoned you for months and
caused GAS. sour stomach, headache
or nervousness.
Or. It. I,. Shnuh, New York, rrports:
4tln addition to bitoatinnl eleantin,, Adlerika
greatly rrdtteet bacteria and rolon biteilll.4*
Mrs. Jas. Filler: “Gas on my stom
ach was so bad I could not eat or
sleep. Even my heart seemed to hurt.
The first dose of Adlerika brought me
relief. Now I eat as I wish, steep fine
and never felt better.’’
Give yoi;r bowels a REAL c'eansino
with Ail'nr i a id see how pud vou
feel, hi!’ NE dose relieves GAS and
constipation.
At aU leading druggists
TlttAL OFFER- For SPECIAL
TRIAL SIZE send 10c, coin or
stamps to Adlerika, Dept. 77, St
Paul, Minn.
BOYS! GIRLS
Create a Spirit of Oooper
ation by joining: the ‘‘GUID
ITE CLUB”
Read all about it in this is
sue. Join NOW.
Golden Brown
Hair Dressing
NOV
Makes your hair beautifully
smooth and ea-y to dress. Same
big package that sold by mil
lions at SOc. at your farorite
drug story NOW 115c.
©LUCK BAG FREE!
SOc Algerian Majo Luck Bag
and samples Hair Dressing.Pow
der. Ointment Free. Send 10c to
cover mailing cost Golden Brown
Chemical Co., Dept. G, Memphis, Teiuu
OMAHAS PIONcER DAIRY*--fj
CLASSIFIED ADS
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
8 furnished apartments. WE
8738.
Newly decorated; unfurnished
apartments, on car line. Call AT
7486., AT 6423, WE 3678, Mrs.
Dixon.
ROOMS FOR RENT
COMFORTABLE rooms in Chris
tian home. AT 1996, 2230 Willis
Ave.
FURNISHED room. 2235 Grant St.
FURNISHED room for man only
JAckson 2549
APT. to a couple or two men. 2280
Ohio St.
FURNISHED room AT 2523
Front Room for rent. 1818 Nicho
las street.
NICE furnished room, WE 2682.
FOR RENT—Love’s Kitchenette
Apartments, 2516-18 Patrick, or
2613 Grant at. Call We. 5553.
MODERN room for right party,
married or single Phone Webster
5728, 2718 No. 28th Ave.
NICE room in quiet home, near
carline. WE 2085
FOR ECONOMIC and comfort of
living try DIXON APTS., AT
7436.
AUTOMOBILE Trunk for sale WE
2294
SHOE-REPAIR SHOPS
YOUR OWN — LAKE SHOE
SERVICE NONE BETTER;
2407 Lake Street.
PERRY AND SON, Transfer, 2624
Caldwell, AT 0114.
COLORED ladies and gentlemen
wanted for soliciting No deliver
ies. WA7677.
SALESLADY—Over 30, Sales abil
ity. Personality, connections im
portant. Write for interview. Tbe
Omaha Guide, 2418 Grant St.
AGENTS, salesmen, sell Face
Cream, Hair Dressing, Tonics,
Shampoos, etc. Big List. Prices
Low. Free catalog. Dept. A, Nation
al Supply Co., Richmond, Va.
Nappanee, Indiana.
Intelligence and Sales Dept. Good
6000 Representatives Wanted,
income assured. E. V. Publishing
House, f 31-305 Elm st., Dept. N3,
AGENTS—ID daily selling Negre
Dolls. Write, National Co., 163
West 126th St., N. Y
Send 10c for six mo. subscription
to interesting magazine. Movie
News and Pictures. Box 452,
Dayton, Ohio.
COLORED RACE ONLY. Nation-!
wide social letter club: new
friends, romance; strictly confi
dential. Particulars free. KIS
MET, Boxx 6166-E., Met. Sta.
Los Angeles, Calif.
AGENTS — Sell Emperor Haile
Selassie Picture, (Sample 25c).
Negro Dolls, Flappers, African
League, 254 W. 135th St., New
York.
MAKE $10 daily selling Negro
dolls, pictures. National Co., 166
W. 126th St, New York City.
WANTED—Experienced —I—man
for rubber work gloves as side
line to retail trade. Liberty Rub
ber Glove Co, Winona. Man.
On the Air....
(By Charles Isaac Bowen for ANI*)
Chicago, March 6—On next Sun
day afternoon at 1:30 (CST) Mar.
14th, on the Men of Destiny pro
gram over the Mutual Broadcast
ing System, the University Broad
casting Council will dramatize The
Life of Toussaint L’Overture, the
noted historical slave who finally
became ruler of what is now Haiti,
and ended up in the dungeons of
Napoleon.
The script written by Ward
Young, portrays, the rise of L’Ov
erture to the governor-generalship
of Haiti.
*****
The premier of the new 1937
show of the famous Cotton Club
will be staged about March 15th
and will be headlined by Ethel Wa
ters and Duke Ellington and his
band.
Ellington will write original
music for a couple of the produc
tion numbers- Reginald Forsythe,
the English composer who wrote
‘‘Senerade to a Wealthy Widow”
and other hits will collaborate with
Andy Razaff, another noted colored
writer, on several numbers. An
other team of writers who have
been placed under contract and are
also working on the score are Le<?
David and Don Redmon, who were
responsible for the current hit,
‘‘The Duchess Had the Duke for
Dinner.”
Ellington and his aggregation
are now heading eastward to New
York City after completion of the
feature picture “Hit Parade” at
the Republic Studios in Hollywood,
to prepare for rehearsals for the
now Cotton Club show.Cab Cal-!
loway and his orchestra will begin
an extended theatre tour at the
RKO theater in Boston, March 18th
which will take him throughout
the east and middle west Lucky
Millender and band " ill follow him
at a later date on the same trail
.Willie Lewis and his band are
soon to open a cafe of their own in
Paris it was learned this week.
Lewis and orchestra have been go
ing over big in Europe since their
arrival. They are also broadcasting
and recording.
Noble Sissle and his band with
Billie Banks and Edna Harris are
creating a sensation in the South
west. It is the first time Noble
and his aggregation have ever
penetrated that far either westward
or into Dixie and their success has
been terrific. The natives have not
been used to the sweet type of
swing which the Sissle boys dis
play and evidently are acquiring
a new brand of jazz culture. The
unit began a ten day stay in the
Club Boga, in Oklahoma City last
week.
*****
To the listeners of Jack Oakie’s
College over Columbia every Tues
day evening, you will not hear
either Fisk, Hampton or Tuskegee
singers on that program as the
guest college songsmiths as pre
sented each week, because the
sponsors, Camel Cigarettes, are
dropping the college singing idea
altogether.
Philadelphia, Pa., March 6—The
Cheyney Chorus of 40 mixed vo
ices will broadcast over the NBC
network, Sunday March 7th from
9:30 to 10:00 a. m
By Frank M. Davis for ANP)
Chicago, Mar. 6—Sportsmanship
in this year's Golden Gloves bouts
■ . the Chicago Stadium has been
unusually significant. Monday, Tues
day and Wednesday nights last
week saw fights between sectional
■vnd city champions for the honor
;>f entering the finals on Friday
;*veiling of this week. But until last
Wednesday’s quarter-finals, the
thousands in attendance had been
lecidedly anti-Negro in mixed
tiouts.
This racial feeling was not beau
tiful to sec- If a colored boxer won
the decision over his white rival,
the crowd ns a rule booed the ver
iict. If a paleface fighter knocked
lown his dusky foe or was giving
tiim a decisive beating, the throng
cheered itself hoar»e. And if the
brown boy was kayoed, it called
For a miniature celebration.
However, maybe this wasn’t so
bad as it appeared- Te truth is
Hint on the first two nights the
icpia fighters were dealing kayoes
in such frequency to Caucasian op
ponents that white spectators evi
iently developed nn inferiority com
plex and seized upon every pretext
bo salvage their blistered egos
But by Wednesday night, only the
classier fighters were left and
most battles were fought on fairly
e'en terms. There were compara
tively few knockouts. And the
crowd reversed its attitude to only
h uts which saw white fil lers
get close decisions over sepias, the
attitude was so changed that the
ofay boys were booed. In view of
what went on the two previous
nights, this i« positively amazing.
*****
.Too Louis and his wife, the for
mer Marva Trotter, were at the
ringside together Wednesday night
—which ought to set at rest those
wild yarns that the couple had sep
arated. Mrs. Louis had arrived that
morning from a vacation in Ber
tinia- Incidently, Joe was wildly
cheered when he stepped into the
ring to award his trophy to the
heavyweight who had displayed
the best sportsmanship during the
tournament. It went to Alex Ket
les, white, of South Bend, Ind.,
who had just been decisioned by
Monroe Harrison of St. Louis, a
brown boy who hadn’t much of a
punch but was the best defensive
boxer in the meet.
Particularly interesting were the
teams from tJhe jim crow belt.
These ofay lads from such places
as Alanta, Oklahoma City, Nash
ville, Lexington, Ky. and other
points south were not used to
fighting colored boys in the ring.
As a result, there were several
1S37 editions of the Civil War with
the Nordics trying to uphold the
honor of the Confederacy, suh, and
the young colored brethem hunt
ing two-fisted vengeance for Ne
gro wrongs in Dixie. But the signi
ficance is that after the bouts,
with few exceptions, the white
southerners and the brown north
erners clasped each others hands
warmly or hugged one another
around the soulders.
In this way a new respect is
borne for people of color. This is
perhaps the greatest contribution
of the Golden Gloves tournaments
to young America. A||iid Kansas
City and St. Louis, two segregated
cities, sent mixed teams to the
fight.
* * > * *
Verne Pattcjrson, welterweight
of the Savoy A. C., received the
Barney Ross trophy for sportsman
ship. In nddition to Patterson, three
other sepias loom as almost cer
tain champions in the finals Fri
day night. Tlhey are William Joyce
of Gary, Ind., National A. A. U.
126 pound champion; A1 Wardlow
of Dayton, 0., former Wilbcrf«rce
student, middleweight and Lem
Franklin of Cleveland, heavyweight
These four are brilliant fighters—
and this boy Franklin is one of the
sweetest boxers and hardest hitters
to show his wares in many a day.
Of t’he 32 finalists, an even do
zen are sepias. In addition to the
other four, they include Mitchell
Walton of Gary, 112 pounds; Clay
ton Johnson of Sioux City, la., 126
William Goldsmith, Chicago, 135;
Nate Bolden, Chicago, (and a
mighty man!), 160; Natfhnn Lo
gan, St. Louis, 175, and Bob Den
nis, Detroit, and Elza Thompson,
Indianapolis, heavyweights. While I
like Franklin, either one of these
last two bruisers is just about as
tough. Three of the four heavy
weight finalists are colored. Paul
Hartnek, white boy who was last
year’s champ, and the other final
ist, seems due for a lacing.
ix*pt. o. Jercey City, N. L
When Poisons Clog
KIDNEYS
And Irritate Bladder
FLUSH THEM OUT
FOR 35-CENTS
Go to your druggist today and
get this safe, swift -and harmless
diuretic and stimulant—ask for
Gold Medal ITaailem Oil Capsules
and start at once to flush kidneys
of waste matter and saturated
with acids and poisons.
That’s the way to bring abont
healthy kidney activity and stop
that bladder irritation which often
causes scanty passage with smart
ing and burning as well as restless
nights.
Remember, the kidneys often
need flushing as well as the bowels,
and some symptoms of kidney
weakness are: Getting up once or
twice during the night—puffy eyes
—cramps in leg—backache and
moist palms
But bo sure and get GOLD
MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules—
the original and genuine—right
f*>m Ilanrlom in Holland—the
prico is small (35-ccnts), the good
results will fulfill your expecta
tions
Johnson Drug: Co.
We Fill Relief Prescriptions
WE. 0998 .. 1904 N. 24th St.
PARKS’ICE* FUEL CO.
We feature package fuel,kind
ling, coal of all k'nds, kerosene
W- C. Perns, prop
2406 Rlondo Street
HARRY BROWN
COAL AND ICE
PACKAGE FUEL
20th & Grace St. WE 1560
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^^5.*^CtNTERNAT10NAL CARTOON CO N YJ ___ - - ".
_ ,„ ——■——■ »' V. i '■ ' ■
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International Cartoon Co., it. v; [| a t , X ' », ___ , | JM1 t •V&e.Q