The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, June 29, 1935, Image 1

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^ -UE IX OMAHA, NEBRASKA, SATURDAY, JUNE 29, 1935 NUMBER SIXTEEN
9
Drinks Pint of Lysol in Attempt to Commit Suicide
iPi EH HhB. BOS*. HP m HF SL REE rhhsfe- igjjt jg &« «B
XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX x.x X
Sout h Omaha Boy Drowned In Missouri River
LEFT RING UNMARKED
C ARNERA BLOODY MASS
Satisfies Hardest Critics
ACCLAIMED ‘ FIRST ’ I*
BOXING WORLD
New York. June 26—The bell rang
and they walked out
Louis feinted a right to the bell}
and then threw a left hook that slit
Camera’s mouth so badly it bled from
both comers.
You knew it was all over.
That one punch told you—told yoi
better than all the thousands of words
spewed from the press agent's type
writer—that the dice were coming
up for Joe Louis, and that Prime
Camera’s number was going up—
maybe with the next punch, maybe
in the next round, but surely going
up
Piimo’s number went up in the
sixth. Coming out of a clinch,
Louis tossed a full right that caught
Primo flush on the chin. Like a pup
pet whose strings had been cut, the
giant Italian buckled at the knees,
swayed for a moment, and then sort
of poured to the canvas.
Bill Duffy yelled from Primo’s cor
ner:
“Take nine!”
But Primo was past hearing, past
thinking All experience was knock
ed out of him, and he rose without a
count.
I switched my eyes to Louis
As Camera rose, slowly, Louis, thf
same inscrutable mask on his face
shuffled in for the kill
He threw a punch. Was it a righi
or a left? I don’t know. It startec
too swiftly. It landed high on Car
r.era’s cheekbone and the Italian sank
to the floor like a shot-through ele
phant. Out of his head, he was up
as the time-keeper tolled, “Two-uh!”
Watching him, bleeding, glassy and
rubber-kneed, you wished he’d stay
down for good, for you knew what
awaited him.
Louis, as cold as ice, met him com
ing up and nailed him with a left.
You saw the blow this time, for he
started it from left seld Camera
hit the deck again. As he crumpled
on the canvas, his comer called
again:
“Take it all!”
But he didn’t hear them- Gamely
he clambered up, this time to run
into another left hook so vicious it
actually bounced him off the floor
and into a standing position. Louis
was drawing a bead on his chin when
Referee Donavan wisely stepped in
and waved him to his comer.
As Louis walked back to his comer
—his face still set in that cold, cruel
east—you knew that all that separat
| ed him from the championship of the
world were signatures on a contract—
. his signature and Jimmy Braddock’s
signature.
Against Louis, Braddock wouldn’t
have a chance. Neither would Baer
nor Schmeling. He’d chill them all
Joe Louis was unmarked as he left
the ring at Cankee Stadium after his
spectacular six-round kayo victory
over Camera.
The giant Italian’s lips were badly
cut and swollen and one eye was com
pletely closed.
Fight cr.tics and sports writers
were unanimous in hailing Joe Louis
as a coming heavyweight champion.
Their comment follows:
Ed Frayne, New York American—
“Louis is possibly the greatest heavy
weight boxing has produced. He hits
as hard as Dempsey and boxes as
we!' as Corbett and is as fine a ring
general as Tunney”
James Dawson. New York Times—
“Louis is the next man to fight for
1 the title ”
Trevor Wignall, London Express—
“Louis is the top man.”
Warren Brown, Chicago Herald
Examiner—“He is the only active
heavyweight today.”
Frank Graham. New York Sun—
“The best since Dempsey.”
Bill Cunningham, Boston Post—
“Louis can whip ’em all in one ring. ”
Jimmy Powers, New York News—
“Lcuis is the hardest hitter since
Dempsey and the best heavyweight I
have ever seen.”
Giantlar.d Rice, New York Sun—
“Right a: the top. A great fighter.”
B-ll Corum. New York Journal—
‘ rank Joe Louis first and Max Baer
second
Dan Pa 'ker, New Tork Mirror-—
“Louis is the tops ”
Caswell Adams. New York Herald
Tribune—"He’s so far ahead of the
ether heavyweights there’s no com
parison ”
After that hectic first round, when
J Lems proved to all those present, that
he really had two hands full of dyna
mite. boxing experts and connoisseurs
of fighting men realized that here
was a man among men. With two
sharpshocting fists he blasted all
doubts in the minds of his critics
about his ability to hit and further
proved that he could take all Camera
had to offer -without even flinching.
Harlem had its biggest moment
since it became the capital of the
Negro world when Joe Louis whipped
Primo Camera Tuesday. The huge
and colorful crowds caused old-timers
to scratch their heads and marvel at
the interest aroused through the up
ward climb and victory of this stolid
but handsome youth from the West, j
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PARENTS :j
Encourage your boy to sell The Omaha I
Guide, (His Race Paper.) Send him to J
The Guide Office, 2418-20 Grant St., for $
full information. ;•
;■ Newsboys’ Department •’
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JOE LOUIS IN ACTION
Y _
LOCATE BODY AFTER
TWO DAYS IN WATER
/T\
Used Suction Machine
in Search
ATTEMPTS TO DIVE FOR
BODY IN VAIN
Titus Alston, 20, 2717 Jeffer
(son Street. South Omaha, was
I drowned Sunday when he went
to the river to make the ‘last
dive before leaving for home with
! his brother and another friend.
V\ hen he failed to come up, his
brother dived in and started
swimming back to shore with
him, he thought. However, Titus
lost his hold or was drawn under
by the current before his brother
could save him.
Divers tried to locate the body,
but were not able to. The body
was in the water two days before
river navigators located it with
| a suction machine.
The hotly was taken to the J.
D. Lewis Mortuary, and the fu
neral was held Thursday at 11
o'clock in the morning from Beth
el Baptist church, with about
| fifteen hundred friends attending.
Interment was in Graceland
; eemeterv, South Omaha.
*
_
Herrifords Heads
Academic Department
Tuskegee Institute, Ala,, June 29,
(ANP)—Neal F. Herriford, who for
eight years has been a teacher in the
English department at Tuskegee In
stitute, has been appointed director
of the Academia department, effec
tive June 1.
Two years ago Mr Herriford filled
I the position of “acting director” dur
ing the absence of Mr- Alphonse
Heningburg, director, who was on
leave, studying at Columbia univers
ity . Mr. Heningburg has been
1 named Director of Vocational Guid
ance and Placement, and entered up
! on his new duties June 1.
Mr. Herriford is a graduate of the
j University of Kansas and received his
Master of Arts degree from Harv
ard university.
Attempts Suicide
Mr. McGoy, 2518 Patrick Ave.
proprietor of the New Ice Cream
parlor, 2122 N. 24th. Street, drank
a pint of Lvsol Thursday evening,
a ut 7 o’clock in an attempt to
m.it suicide. It is rumored
domestic troubles caused the
ide attempt.
1 was taken to Lord Lister
ital. Ills condition is very
us. but it is believed that
is a chance for his recovery.
.■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■■■■■■■■ana • . ,
Kentucky Hospital
Makes Good Record
Hopkinsville, Ky., June 23—(ANT)
I —Pour years of successful as well
as beneficial service has been com
pleted by the Moore’s Hospital, here ■
according to a report made public
Tuesday. This report shows that dur
ing the four years of existence, more
then 300 operations have been per
formed by members of the staff, and
several hundred other patients treat
| ed at the institution with the remark
able record of one deah
Dr. B. 0 Moore, is surgeon in
chief and the staff is composed of
Drs. F. T. Frazier and J. C Hop
kins, with Mrs. Mayme B. Moore
and Miss Georgia Buckner as the
: nurses
Death Comes to
Builder of Beautv
At Hampton
Hampton Institute, Vt., June
27.—-Leigh Richmond Miner,
builder of beauty in grounds and
total landscape at Hampton In
stitute, died in Dixie Hospital
here, Sunday morning, June 9,
1935.
Most simple, but beautiful and
impressive funeral services were
held in the Hayden Funeral Home
in Hampton, and were conducted
by Rev. Camille A. Cazeaud*
j Scholarship Secretary of Hamp
ton Institute, whose tribute to
the character and usefulesss of
i the late teacher were tender and
appreciative.
The body was taken to the
schools cemetery for burial, the
pallbearers being. Messrs. Robert
Ogden Purves, Wilfred E. Carter,
E. F. Wewins, C. E Chevene, E.
H. BentzeL and J. S. Darling.
He came to Hampton in 1898
as art teacher, being in continu
ous service in that capacity until
1921 when he became director of
applie dart, with general over
sight of landscape architecture at
the Institute. The hosts of per
sons who have often and in so
many places expressed apprecia
tion of the beauty of Hampton’s
grounds, have been paying un
conscious tribute to the artistry
and sense of perfection of this
quiet, efficient worker who not
only wrote poetry but transmuted
it into lovely arrangements of
walks, buildings, bowers and
stately trees.
He was retired in 1933; but
Hampton’s campus will be a per
petual memorial of the work he
did here.
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I CLUBS I
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I; for full particulars. j:
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_L- R- MEner, Beauty Builder of Hampton Institute, Dies