The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, October 05, 1935, Page SIX, Image 6
IN THE REALM OF ...S PORT S... Tuskegee Has Heavy Line and Fast Backs Tuskegee Institute, Ala., Oct. 5 —(AMF)-^Football of 1935 will be opened here Saturday after noon ^when the Bulldogs of South Carolina State and coached by Brooks meet the Tuskegee Tigers in Alumni Bowl. For the first time in three years, the Tigers will present a heavy, powerful but fast charging forward wall, with a group of versatile backs, according to those who have watched the practice sessions. Aiken, carrying 240 pounds and Thad Green, who tips the beam at 215 pounds and operates from the pivot position ,have added much to the weight and power of the line, while Turner Higgins is mak ing a bid for first team honors at half back. Mobley the brainy field general is in the peak of condition and has done much to dispell the gloom which settled over the Tiger camp at the begin ning of the practice season. Jesse Owens Proves First Class Model Cleveland, Ohio, Oct. 5—(ANP) —Jesse Owess, track star and team captain at Ohio State uni versity has for some time shown young men on the cinder path and in field • events a perfect model but Saturday evening it fell to Jesse’s lot to show the young man attending the style show a the Phyllis Wheatley home just what the modern well dress ed young man should wear. Ac cording to critics the Ohio flash did a jam up job. The affair was staged by the popular and fashionable Proto Club and as a supporting cast Owens had a bovy of comely and beautifull ydressed young women who were displaying just what the girls would wear this fall and winter. The clothes displayed as well as the nanikins wore of the highest caliber and despite the fact that a dance was following the style show the patrons were loathe to see the style exhibit close. Football Games October 5th % ■" r_ ; - Hampton vs N. C. College at Durham, N. C. North Carolina A. ? T. vs. Mor gan at Baltimore. South Carolina State vs Tusk egee at Tuckegee. Livingstone College vs Claflin at Orangeburg, S. C. Morris Brown University, vs Allen at Columbia, S. C. Georgia State vs Dorchester at Savannah, Ga. Haines Jr. College vs Harbison at Irma, S. C. Bishop College Vs Wiley at Marshall ,Texas. South Carolina To Attempt To Stop Tuskegee Team Orangeburg, S. C., Oct. 5— (ANP)—Six sets of backs at South Carolina State have been working over time during the past week getting in readiness for the open ing game when the Bulldogs will do their all to stop the Tuskegee Institute Tigers in their onrush, according to Tuskegee supporters, o the ehampionshio of the South eastern championship. Coach Brooks, with his assist ants, Jewell, Crawford and Lewis, are driving the Bulldogs long and hard each day, laying particular stress upon the open game, which evidently will be used against Tuskegee. The Tigers, coached by Cleve Abbott will have a decided edge in weight so the local mentors ase planning to show them a lot of passes, during the afternoon of October 5. Chicago, 111., Oct. 5—(ANP)—Ring critics all over the 'nation are ex hausting their adjectives to describe the grace and skill with which Joe Louis, uncrowned heavyweight cham pion of the world, chopped up and knocked out Max Baer during their four round fistic engagement in New York’s Yankee Stadium scarcely two hours after he had married Miss Marva Trotter of Chicago, a survey of newspapers show. Even Dixie toots as loud as any on the Brown Bomber bandwagon, with Alabama papers “pointing with pride” to the prowess of a native son. Zipp Newman, sport columnist for the Birmingham News, the day following the fight had this to say, among other tributes: “Barring cyclones, train wrecks and hurricanes, Alabama will furnish the next heavyweight champion of the world. And this will be just as soon as Jimmy Brajdock risks his title with Joe Louis . . . Louis not only boxed like a Jack (Johnson, but punched like a Jack Dempsey . . . There has never been another Joe Louis. He is all fighter and he doesn’t know how to smile .. .Jimmy Brad dock wants to keep several states and a lot of time between him and the Alabama bomber . . . . ” William McGee O’Keefe, sports editor of the New Orleans Times Picayune who covered the fight per sonally, says in part: “Louis had everything. Instead of an inexperienced fighter facing a seasoned warrior, as most of us thought would be the role of Louis, the young Negro looked like a master handling a novice—as polished and perfect a fighter as the Negro look ed. however, he showed such improv ment over the Camera fight that students of the game say he will con tinue to improve. “It he does he will take rank not only as the greatest fighter that the black race ever sent into the ring but one of the most brilliant heavy weights of all time.” Southern papers carried Louis pic tures of all sizes. Dailies in the north and south, some for the first time in their histories, carried the picture of a Negro woman on the front page when the 19 year old stenographer became the bride of the 21 year old ring master. An odd note was infused into the situation by Patrick Murphy of the London Daily Express who reported a pre-fight trans-atlantic conversa tion with Joe in the best Dixie man ner, calling the Brown Bomber the “Bible-reading Negro boxer”. Quot ing from the London story: “Ah been workin’ out all day”, he began. “I ran six miles on a road, and now Ah’m goin’ play with my sparrin’ partners. This is Joe Louis heah. S'pase I should have said that first, eh?” “He has the richest southern ac cent I have heard for years. Listen ing to him is like having a Negro comedian all to yourself.” Paul Gallico of the New York Dai ly News, whose recent article on Joe Louis in the magazine Vanity Fair under the title “Mean Man” attract ed considerable attention, stood amaz ed at a man who could marry and rush immediately to the prize ring and there vanquish his evening’s foe. “If there was ever a more remark able man in the ring than Detroit’s Joe Louis, the colored heavyweight, then you will have to dig in the past of fistfightng for some long forgot ten, unsung fighter. Here tonight he went from a wedding to an execution. The wedding was his own. And he played the role of the executioner. He went from tenderness to terror, and there is no figuring, or knowing, or< even believing a man like that,” Gal lico wrote. “Here was the coldest concentra tion ever a man displayed. And I wonder if his new bride’s he§rt beat a little with fear that this terrible thing was hers.” With little ground left for ary oth er comparison, experts are now won dering what would have happened had Joe fought Jack Dempsey in the Manassa Mauler’s primp. Anjl here is what Warren Brown, sports column ist of the Chicago Herald Examiner has to say: “Dempsey would have given Lopis a fight. He’s the only one I can think of in a long line of heavyweight champions who would. Dempsey would have taken a terrible beating. But he wouldn’t have quit. But in his very best day he couldn’t have beat en this Joe Louis, who hasn’t yet reached his top form.” Jack himself, immediately after the fight, when quizzed by reporters said he would have liked to fight Joe. “But I’m glad I’n> in the restaurant business,” he added. Probably the prize story to appear after the battle was carried in the Chicago Tribune which said it was handed in by the Chicago branch of a New York brokerage firm. The yarn goes: “At the end of the first round Dempsey, Baer’s chief second, said to Max: “ ‘Go after him, old man, he ain’t got a glove on you and you’re fine.’ “Dempsey repeated tke same thing at the end of the second round and at the end of th third round said Where Ethiopia’s Fiercest Warriors Come From Huts of Dunakil tribesmen In the desert wastes bordering French Somaliland. The wild Danakil war riors were one ot the main factors in the defeat of the Italians in 1S96. They are regarded as the most bar barous of Ethiopian tribesmen. This scene was made in Aussa province, which Ethiopia offered to sell to Italy to avert a clash. _._—__ ____ ETHIOPIAN FLYER Spikes Threat Of War —(ANP Special Correspondence) Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, Oct. 5. —“Everyone here is of the opin ion that war will start about the middle or the last of this month,’’ stated Colonel John C. Robinson, Brown Condor of Ethiopia and commandor of Emperor Haile Sel assie’s Royal Air Forces this week. “Personally’’ ,he continued, “I don’t think it will start at all. There might be a little fighting on the frontier, but that will be all. No one here agrees with me, but time will tell.” Colonel Robinson ,former Chi cago aviator and Tuskegee grad uate, in expressing his opinion of the air fighting in the imponding conflict, said: “You see Addis Ababa is 8500 feet above sea level and when one flies on cross country trips for purpose of bombings or any other form of combat, he has to fly around 16,000 feet to stay a safe distance over the mountains. r or some days I have been doing patrol duty over the Erir rean front and then I returned here and patrolled the eastern part of Ethiopia which is along the frontier of Italian Somali land .We are using a 550 horse power French airplane, which frankly, I don’t like, but as the chief of the aviation corps is a Frenchman, most of the planes are French. “If war actually starts and the Italians plan to use their vaunted air escadrille, they are in for more difficulties than any land fighter or layman, so to speak, can un derstand. I have flown the heights in the United States, but in flying here, I have suffered a little from ‘air sickness’. Now I feel used to it, but it is very sel dom that a pilot has to fly over six thousand feet high and to do any successful bombing from such an altitude, one has about one chance out of six thousand to do any damage to the particular tar get he was aiming for. “Frankly, I do not believe that again: ‘II ain’t layir’ a glove on you, Max. Go right after him.’ “Max turned and said: “ ‘Well for the love of Mike, keep an eye on Referee Donovan, then, smebody is beating hell out of me.” the modern equipment that Italy is planning to use against Ethiopia will be of any actual value. At the most, the most decisive result would come, not from the physi cal harm done or the economical ruin to Ethiopia, but rather the psychological effect wrought on the natives. “The great ‘boom* of the giant artillery guns, the -‘screech of shrapnel' and the ‘shrill’ of bombs from airplanes might re act unfavorably to them. Thes$ results, however, are problemati cal. The Ethiopians have been worked up to a battle fevor wherein noise alone will not in spire fear within them. Warriors of old ,who yet remember Adowa, and the fighting on the terrain on the Italian Eritrean frontier back in the hostoric battle of 1896, feel that with the end of the rainy season in sight, matters here are rushing to a climax. “The Ethiopian does not at tack or disparage Negroes of oth er nations. Instead, he receives them as blood kin and oply lang uage limitations keep them from the instanteous friendship which marks the daily like of Ethiop ians. “There are over one hundred reporters here from all over the I world, and many camera men. The cablegraph office seems to be do ing more business than any other concern here at present. All you can hear is war, war. war. Every Ethiopian has a wonderful patri otic spirit, and will be very, very sad if there isn’t a war. Patriotic speeches are made from time to time by Ethiopians encouraging the people to stay united and if war comes to fight to the last person.” A German inventor’s razor blade sharpening device is operated by drawing it along a tight string that causes stropping cylinders to re volve. Treated with a flexible bakelite material, a textile with many uses has been invented that resists the effects of liquors that stain or cor rode. Crime and Family Life By R. A. ADAMS (For the Literary Service Bureau) Long has it been known that pros titution dragged many married wo men down into its vortex, but, of late burglary and banditry have wrought destruction with family life and hap piness. I am thinking especially of the murder of Dickin, in Detroit, by a man named Ferris who had four young women associated with him in this terrible crime. These young wo men were marred, or had been marri ed, showing that there was the dis position to go straight; and doubt less crime lured them from the straight way. On of these girls is the mother of two children and the wife of the chief murderer was an expectant mother. Here we come face to face with heredity in the one case and prenatal influence plus heredity, in the other. Begotten by a degraded, vicious murderer, conceived in lust, rather than love, borne by a woman associated with others in crime, such a child could have little chance to escape destruction. These are a few of the thousands of instances in which crime is de stroying family life; and famjily life destroyed means destruction of our civilization which has been so long and so laborously in process of de velopment. The aspect is sad; but the prospect is sadder, still. Mothers—Let your boys be Guide newsboys. Send them to the Omaha Guide Office, 2418-20 Grant Street. GROW HAIR • STRAIGHT - •LUSTROUS • GLEAMING • LONG L e# ^ ov i Mirro' Pto«e The Resu'ts Your hair need not be short, acraggly. kinky, nor need it be dried out, faded and life less tor there ia a wa> to a overcome this Door condi |! tion that destroys the na j tura. beauty of the hair. ' This new different method will grow 'ong, lustrous, I glossy silken straight hair. I 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. Send COUPON now before it is too- late for the FREE Treatise 7-Day Trial Offer. 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