Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 104, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 August 1926 — Page 17
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mHE second nine is better than the first,” remarked George Soutar, pro, at' Broadmoor Country Club, Tuesday, as we praised the greens and fairways, after playing nine holes. George, Mike Sullivan, his assistant, and Nelson Marks, local amateur, were_the others who played the round. Feeling that you would like to have Inside information on how a round of perfect golf should be played, we asked George to play the ball. He shot three putts to the lip the cup, on the first nine, and was three over, with 38. When we started the second half, he stated he felt the greens were dry an& par could be shot. Trouble lurks right at the start, for number ten fairway dog legs around a fence corner, and it's easy to get into the corn ‘field. George played the hook, was in the center of the fairway, and was on with an Iron on two. Two putts down the sloping green, trapped and protected in front with a knoll, wfere perfect, for par 4, distance 400 yards. Mike played similar golf for a half. The most beautiful landscape of the course presents itself for hole No. 11. The tee shot is a mashie, over a ravine and creek to a green, on a hillside, that is rolling, trapped . and spongy. A perfect shot sticks, I otherwise to the right is rough, and the left somewhat of an uncut fairway. Par is 3, distance 193. •• * - ..No. 13 is one of the longest holes on the Broadmoor second nine. 491 yards long. Proper tee and iron shot, straight and long, will get you over most of that distance without trouble in the rough. The fairway is rolling however. The green , Is necked small at the front, and polling, raised and trapped pn three sides. Like all the greens it is soft, so that a mashie shot will stick, and if the third is played on. two putts make par fire. George did It. while Mike sank a long one tor a four, and >Jarks halved the hole. Hole 13 is a dogleg, back to the clubhouse. 340 yards long and over a fairway that is trapped at intervals with sand and bunkers. The fairway is fast, and the green should be reached on the second shot with the brassie. said Gaorge as he shot ft. This leaves two putts for par four, ■which George did. and kept up his par golf. Each green seemed better, and the roiling ground the ravines and the natural terrain forced us to accede to Georges statement that (he second nine was even better than the first ,* * * Hole 14 is another long one. the best golf hole of the last nine. If your drive, is bad. you're out of luck. A straight ball takes you to the top nf a knoll, and the second is a pitch to the green, that is situated at the start up the other side of the knoll, natural slope of the green.
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By Dick Miller.
winch is necked and trapped, with a creek in front, nakes it a wonder to shoot at as a test of skill. Marks sank his pitch in iho soft green, inches from the cup. and Soutar was on in two and down in par lour. Another shot calling for. skill confronts you on number 15. A" short mashie shot to green. 145 yards, with creek crossing fairway, and running on right bank of green. Traps are on the left, and the green rolling. It is par 3, and Soutar shot it, being down in the allotted two putts A drive honked around the tree is best on number 17, that a perfect shot, along fne shortest distance to the hole. The distance is 570 yards, the longest on the course. Two full woodshots will bring you to position for an accurate pitch to the green on the third, and two putts for a sure par 5. The fairway is rolling with a ditch to cross, and the green raised and trapped. • * • Going home on number IS is a pleasant golf hole A straightaway shot, level fairway, and to a green that is a wonder Trees surround the green. making the nidgment of distance the prime factor. Traps on the sides make accuracy necessary and it is par 5. 478 yards long. George shot the last, nine in par. 37. and played the part we wished to picture to you. first that golf courses are layed out with Par possible Going out you cover 3 386 yards, in oar 35. and coming in the distance is 3.332 for par 37. The total distance is 6.(118 Broadmoor is a coming club, and with Highland is the classv links of the city, with eighteen holes all in fine ahape. Soutar and his assistants are to be commended for the perfect condition We visited the club without advance notice and-found it in natural condition ' THISTLEDOWN CLOSES •Injunction, Stopping; Betting, Forces Track to Discontinue Meet. Bu United Press CLEVELAND, Aug. 6.—Horse racing at Thistledown track, near I ere, scheduled to continue until Aug. 14 was called off today, following issuance of an injunction by Chief Justice C. T. Marshall of the Ohio Supreme Court, to stop all forms of gambling. At the same time. Attorney General C. C. Crabbe announced in Co* lumbus the Injunction sets a precedent by which gambling will be stopped at every other track In the State. Cancellation of other scheduled meets was considered possible in view of the announcement. BUFFALO STAR SOUGHT Bu United Press BUFFALO, Aug 6.—Several major league baseball clubs are bidding for the contract of Bill Kelley, first baseman for the Buffalo International League Club, and home run leader of the league. The Philadelphia Athletics and. the Washing ton Senators are said to have made the best offers in cash and players. |
Another Bradley Victory
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At top, Boot-To-Boot just after win nlng rich American derby, Albert Johnson up; bottom, finish of race w itli Boot-To-Boot showing heels to Display and B lack Maria.
Albert Johnson, one of America's premier jockeys, turned in another brilliant triumph for the E. R. Bradley stables when he piloted Boot to Boot across the wire first in the $100,006 American Der#y last week. It was Johnson's ■ SINGLE G HOME Bu United Press MUNCIE, Ind., Aug. 6.—Single G, 16-year-old aristocrat of the harness, came home today. The famous horse was featured in a county fair race over the half-mile track on which he once trained for his brilliant career -An the Grand Circuit.
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fourth derby triumph of the year, he having been astride Bagenbaggage In the Bubbling Over in the Kentucky and Boot to Boot in the Ohio State before his most recent success. It put the Bradley winnings well over the $200,000 mark for the year.
sonly one Policy: Satisfaction or your money bac
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ALL LOVELY BETWEEN CHAMP JACK AND WIFE Dempsey May Be Having His Troubles With Lawyers, Ets., But There’s N o Domestic Discord. ' By Henry L. Farrell NEW YORK, Aug. 6.—Jack Dempsey may have been having his troubles with lawyers, process servers, boxing commissions, former managers and what not, but there is no domestic discord around the establishment of the world’s heavyweight champion. , ,
“Ask the wife,” the champion replied when he was asked about the story printed recently that Miss Es telle Taylor, his "Wife, and a prominent movie actress, was going to divorce him. / Miss Taylor, sitting beside her husband. flared up and sputtered before she answered. “I saw that story and I never have been so irritated in my life,” she said. “We're happy now and we have been happy, haven't we, Jack?” she continued. The champion gave a laugh—“l’ll say so,” and embraced his wife. "This is not movie stuff, either,” he said. *• Mrs. Dempsey said she had mar ried the champion because she loved him and that his reputation as a boxer, his financial standing as the wealthiest of all champions and the publicity that she might get from their alliance had not been considered. No Different "I guess we got married just because we loved each other and we're not different from our mothers and fathers. I kr\iw of no reason that we should!.’t he treated as normal, | people and not be forced to deny all I the rumors that we hear," she said. ‘‘TheiVs one particularly good j trait that Jack has and it helps him a lot. worries about.stories jthat are printed about him. But I I do. He doesn't read all the papers j regularly but I do and I save the I clippings. And, by the way, you wrote a nasty story about him last winter,” she said. The writer insisted that he didn’t remember of writing such a story.
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"Well, it was signed by you." she said, “and I'll show it to you as soon as I get my trunks opened. I save all of them—the good and the bad.” Not a Prima Donna Mrs. Dempsey said that Jack was just an ordinary fine fellow around the home, that he wasn't a prima donna and didn't have any artistic temperament. "We don't have to regulate the menu for him. He likes the things to eat that I like and I eat most anything. , “I can eook and have cooked for him, but he travels around so much and I am so busy with movie work that I can't be very domestic. And he doesn't want me to be a kitchen mechanic/' Mrs. Dempsey said Jack wanted her to remain with him.all during his training for the fight against Gene Tunney, which Tex Rickard hopes to stage in the Yankee Stadium on Sept. 16. ‘‘l can remain for only a fetv weeks as I have to return to Hollywood and go back to work," she said. With Vale-ntby> She was asked If Jack ever was ! jealous about movie actors. “He hasn't said anything," she answered, “And now that I am to work with Valentino he might not want to say anything because I hear that Valentino is a fighter.” Jack was asked about his opinion of Valentino as a fighter and he replied: * "Say, he's pretty good, let me tell you. I worked with him a
Couple of times and he’s no bargain with the gloves.” Mrs. Dempsey said there was no manager o,- boss in the champion's home and that they didn’t need a manager. “The only time I have wanted to do any bossing was about the selection of his clothes. He would prefer to dress as sedately as an undertaker, hut I like Clothes with a little life in them—not race track suits, but something young like,”_she said. Everybody Happy “I never tell her anything about her clothes,” the champion cut in "and she can't tel! me anything about mine—but I usually get what she likes and then everybody’s fiappy.” Mrs. Dempsey never has seen the champion fight and she will not be at the ringside when he meets Tunney. “I haven’t any'ohjection to the game, of course," she said, "But I don't believe I could stand the strain.” GLOVE SHOW All-Negro Boxing Bouts at Brightwood Tonight. There will be five bouts on the all-Negro fistic program at the Brightwood open air arena tonight, first scrap at 8:30. Fans who enjoy plenty of action probably will find it when the Negro boys tangle. The boys usually start stepping at the opening bell and continue furious mauling until the finish, or until one falls under the punching Kid Edwards and Joe Hardy are carded to battle In the headliper of ten rounds and One-Round Bess, a consistent winner recently, meets Jacobs In the ten-round semi-wind-up. There will be three prelim fights. CANADIAN GOLF Bu United Press MONTREAL, Aug. 6.—Two New Yorkers lead at the end of the first round of the Canadian open golf championship. They are Gene Sarazen and Johnny Farrell. Both made a <9 on the links of the Royal Montreal Golf Club.
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EIGHT LEFT Public Links Golf Meet in Final Stages. Bu United Press BUFFALO, N. Y„ Aug. 6.—Minneapolis, Pittsburgh, Chicago, Detroit and New York were represented in the eight-man field that went out In the quarter-finals In the national public links championship at Grover Cleveland Park today. The metropolis had three representatives, Richard J. Walsh, 1923 “municipality” champion and medal winner in the present tournament; Joe Ford arid Nick D'Onofrio. Chicago was represented by William Wallace-and E. B. (Ted) Lloyd. The white-haired Lester Bolstad carried the banner ilf Minneapolis, while Stanley Ford was Detroit’s hope. Carl F. Kaufmann is the lone survivor of the smoke city's sextet. Two rounds were to be played today and the two remaining contestants tonight will then advance to the thirty-six-hole final to be played Saturday. The feature match of Thursday’s ! first and second rounds was the afternoon struggle between Joe Ford j of NOw York and Ed Curtin of Newark. Ford tied the count on the I clubhouse green when he holed a forty-foot putt and then the match went to four extra holes before Curtin sliced a tee shot to lose. Dick Walsh is a slight favorite. RIVERSIDE NET MEET Second Round Matches on Schedule in Local Tourney. The second round of the Riverside tennis tourney was scheduled today. The card: 2 O Clock—m. Kurzrock vs. D. Bastian: L. Kufzrock vs A Neumter. 3 O'clock—L. Reynolds vs. R. J. Pantzer 4 O Clock—F. Neumier vs. H Justus; J. Snapp vs. E. Lentz. 5 O'Clock—F. Stevens vs, E. Gtlberti; B. Fletcher vs. Stewart. The last of the first round matches on Thursday brought out seme fast play. Results: Sapp defeated Montgomery, 64, 6-0; Stevens defeated Roth, 6-0, 6-1; Lentz defeated Taylor. 6-2, 6-3.
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