Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 43, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 June 1933 — Page 22

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By Joe Williams Power of Camera Finally is Aroused m m m Primo Cuts Loose Like Charging Bull mm m Jack Quivers in Heap on Ring Floor

ORK, June 30.—Mohammed went to the mountain, and today is an ex-heavyweight champion. In the sixth round of a fight for the championship of the world, Jack Sharkey tore into Primo Camera, the man mountain, and was knocked into a quivering heap by a right uppercut to the jaw. Thus one brief year after he had won the championship from Max Schmeling in the same sunken bowl over in Long Island on a decision that provoked widespread dissatisfaction among the customers, Sharkey was erased from the heavyweight picture for all time. And on the roaring force of that right hand uppercut a native born son of Italy rose to an eminence in the sports world that has never been enjoyed by another of his race. Camera, former wrestler, circus strong man, stone mason, is the first Italian heavyweight champion. It was a stirring, dramatic battle between a man who weighed 201 pounds and another man who weighed 260 V* pounds with the disparity in size and power proportionately emphasized. A pygmy met a giant. Goliath looked down upon David and his slingshot and laughed. A woodsman tried to fell an oak with a nail file. a a a poWER .. . power . . . power! That was the chief impression of the A Italian you carried away from the ring. Once he almost threw Sharkey through the ropes with a flick of the wrist. In the clinches it was like a gorilla toying with a child. And you feared any second the gorilla might decide to be more than mischievous. Heretofore his offense consisted mainly, of a fair left hand. Thursday night he was a two-handed fighter. Particularly did he employ the right uppercut with effective results. The finish came after the sixth round had gone two minutes and twenty-seven seconds. Up to that time Sharkey was in front on points. He had won the second, third and fifth rounds, and did not seem to be in any particular danger. It was evident from the start that Sharkey had optimistic hopes of an early knockout victory. The Bostonian would wind up his right and throw it with full force at the Italian's long, overhanging jaw. Sometimes it landed, and sometimes it missed. When it landed it seemed to do no aopreciable damage This must have been discouraging to Sharkey. Two years ago when he hit Camera on the jaw he floored him, almost had him out, in fact. a a a \ ND yet, as I say, he was out in front going 'into the sixth round Something occurred in the fifth round that may have hastened the climax. Sharkey stung Camera with a right to the head. This seemed to rouse the giant to an insane fury, a dozing dinosaur awakened by a hornet s bite. He bared his teeth, squinted his eyes, snorted and rushed Sharkey with a madness that was not pleasant to watch. Between rounds. Bill Duffy of Broadway, who exploited Camera on the now historic sucker tour, when everything had to be arranged in advance, hissed in the Italian’s ear: Go out and tear him to pieces. Take every advantage you can ” There were not many advantages to be taken. Early in the round Camera hit Sharkey in the stomach with two hard punches. A little la f €r he caught him with another flurry of punches in the body and Sharkey slipped to one knee. There was no count. It was beginning to look bad for him. 8 a a a A ND then came a whooping right hand that caught Camera on the -f A chin and brought the ringsiders to their feet with a sharp muffled cry of expectancy . . . maybe the little man of 201 pounds could still do it. Maybe .. . what's that! .. . Sharkey is on the floor. Camera has nailed him with that right uppercut against the ropes! Referee Arthur Donovan counts. At eight, Sharkey, lying face downward, stirs. Nine and out . . .It is all over . . . They drag Sharkey to his corner, apply restoratives. . . . Finally he gets up on wobbly legs, holds his clenched hands aloft, and when the crowd cheers he blows a kiss to the sultry atmosphere ... He leaves the ring an exchampion. 6

Negro Sprint Stars Meet in A. A. U. Track Feature Tonight

BY GEORGE KIRKSEY, United Press Staff Correspondent CHICAGO, June 30. The nation’s greatest track and field athletes, augmented by several foreign stars, compete today and tonight in the American championships at Soldier field. The A. A. U.s women’s championships take place this afternoon, followed tonight by the senior men’s championships under the floodlights. The three-day athletic carnival opened with the junior A. A. U. championships Thursday and included many unexpected happenings. Among them were the victory of Jim Johnson, Illinois State Normal Negro, over Jess Owens, Cleveland Negro schoolboy, in the 100-meter dash, spoiling the A. A. U.s ballyhoced "Century of the Century” tonight between Owens and

Semi-Pro and Amateur Notes

KAUTSKY A. C. AT FT. WAYNE Ft. Wavne will be the scene of action for Kautskv A. C. this Sunday. Kautskvs have dropped only two games this season. one of them to Ft. Wavne bv a 5 to 2 count, and the locals are Seeking revenge. Bader probably will be on the mound for the locals, with Kelly or Booz receiving. Kautskvs will plp.v here on July 4 when they meet Middletown. 0.. at Pennsv park. Players are asked to meet Sunday at 8:30 at Strauss store. O'Hara Sans are without a game for July 9. due to the disbanding of the Muncie Maroons State teams write H. L. Hustcdt. 1130 North Denrborn street, for this date. Sans will play at New Ross Sunday and at Carthage on July 4. Schmitt and Oliver will hurl for the Sans. Eastern All-Stars added another victory to their string, defeating C. M. 8.. 11 to 0. Hannibal pitched fine ball and was given strong support. Stars play at Pendleton Saturday and at Advance on Sunday. For games, write Bob Ricketts. 1327 East Twentv-fifth street, or call Ri. 6262. Crescent All-Stars will play West Indianapolis Cubs Sunday at Belmont held in Haughville at 3 p m Stars have open dates in July and August and would like to hear from state teams. Write Charles Burnett. 804 West Tenth street. Indianapolis. Indianapolis Automotive Maintenance Association will plav West Newton Sunday at 230 p. m. at West Newton. Tuesday. the I A. M. A will plav at doubleheader at Micklevville diamond. First same starting promptly at 1. Mohawk A. C.s will plav Indianapolis Railway nine at the old West Washington ball nark diamond Sunday at 2:30. All players please report. Due to the rain of last Sunday all games of that dßte in the Catholic League were postponed and will be olavrd off in double headers during the third and final round which will start on July 23 Schedule for Sunday July 2 follows: St. Pats

BASEBALL Perry Stadium TONIGHT 8:15 P. M. LADIES’ NITE Indians vs. Columbus Family Nite in Bleachers, 40c; Box Seats, sl.2s—Grand Stand, 75c.

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Ralph Metcalfe, Marquette Negro flash, and the setting of new junior A. A. U. records in five of the nine field events. The 100-meter race between Johnson and Owens was the high spot. Owens flashed out of his holes and led three-quarters of the race, but couldn’t stave off Johnson’s fast finish. Johnson's time was 10.4 seconds, only one-tenth of a second off the world’s record, and remarkable when it w'as considered he ran into the wind and only minutes before a downpour. Metcalfe, Johnson and Owens will meet in the senior 100-meter event tonight. A record-breaking entry list of 372 athletes from all sections of the country are entered in tonight's meet which is expected to develop into one of the most spectacular in A. A. U. annals.

vs. Assumption at Garfield No. 1; Lourdes vs. Holy Trinity at Riverside No. 5; holy Cross vs St. Francis at Brookside No. 2. The St. Francis nine is leading the circuit and. Holy Cross. Lourdes. Holy Trinity and St. Pats are in a four-wav tie. Assumption is trailing. CARLIN MEETS GLOVER, BAKER FACES WILCOX The double windup to feature Bill Mahoney's inaugural wrestling card at Broad Ripple Monday night was completed today by matchmaker Jay Garner. Ed Baker, local favorite, will tangle with Howard Wilcox of Columbus, 0., in the semi-final bout for two falls out of three with a forty-five minute limit. Baker has just returned from a Canadian tour. In the top two falls out of three tussle, Johnny t Swede) Carlin tangles with Max Glover, clever veteran from Omaha. An opener is being arranged. STILL SOME LEFT Eighty-four of the 200 players in the American League have Irish blood. PANTS—PANTS—PANTS ATE SIZES { 4 n n ALL COLORS 0 | .UU and ALL STYLES | = Up fuff* as Large as You Want THE PANTS STORE CO. 46 West Ohio Street Gentlemen’s Fine Clothes MADE TO ORDER KAHN Second Floor Kahn Bid*. caps jr New patterns, the kind you won't sec elsewhere. LEVINSON Hatter SPECIAL PRICE ANY COAT RELINED $3.50 LEON cke '"t W II TAILOR ISI E. FEW YORK STREET

Indianapolis Times Sports

Tribe Turns on Birds and Annexes Thriller Three Singles, Walk and Wild Pitch in Ninth Changes Defeat to Victory Thursday; Bolen Shines in Pinch; Women Free Again Tonighf. BY EDDIE ASH Times Sports Editor They made it close at Perry stadium Thursday night and when the Columbus-Indian series opener was finished both ball clubs were well worn and the customers were groggy. The Tribesmen pulled the contest out of the skillet in the last inning after the lead had changed hands twice before. It took two runs to win the struggle in the ninth and that is exactly what the home nine accomplished, beating Paul Dean, the third hurler employed by the league-leading Red Birds. The score was 6 to 5. It was an exciting final round. In the first half, with the visitors out in front, 5 to 4, Riggs of Columbus tripled after one out and Lefty Stewart Bolen relieved Bill Thomas on the Tribe slab. The veteran southpaw thrilled the fans by striking out both Delancey and Winford leaving Riggs cooling his heels on third. This turn of events created marked nervousness among the Red Birds.

Equipoise, in Chicago Race By Time* Special , NEW YORK, June 30.—Equipoise, holder of the American turf mile record of 1:34 2-5, was on his way to Chicago today to fill important engagements. C. V. Whitney’s handicap champion will compete in the Stars and Stripes Handicap at Arlington Tuesday. He also is eligible for the Arlington cup and Arlington handicap. Equipoise, who has won three successive races this year, stepped a mile in 1:38 in his final practice Thursday. He will carry 135 pounds in the Arlington race. At Stadium Thursday COLUMBUS AB R H O A E Anderson, cf 4 1 1 5 0 0 Rothrock. 2b 4 1 2 3 1 0 Borgmann, ss 4 0 2 1 3 0 Heath, lb 4 0 0 9 1 1 Cullop, rs 4 1 2 2 0 0 Blades, If 3 2 1 1 0 0 Riggs. 3b 4 0 2 2 2 0 Delancey. c 4 0 1 3 1 0 Winford, p 3 0 0 0 2 0 Teachout. p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Dean, p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 34 5 11 126 10 T tTwo out when winning run scored. INDIANAPOLIS AB R H O A E Layne, If 4 1 1 2 0 0 Lee, ss 4 1 1 4 0 0 Cooney, cf 5 0 1 2 0 0 Sigafoos, 2b 3 0 2 0 3 1 Bedore, lb 4 1 1 7 0 0 Chapman, rs 3 1 1 0 0 0 Riddle, c 4 0 2 7 4 1 White. 3b 3 0 0 5 3 0 Callaghan l l l o 0 0 Thomas, p 3 1 0 0 2 0 Bolen, p o 0 0 0 0 0 Angley l o 0 0 0 0 Totals 35 6 10 27 12 ~2 Callaghan batted for White In ninth. Angley batted for Bolen in ninth. Columbus 210 000 200— 5 Indianapolis 002 002 002— 6 Runs batted in—Cullop (2). Delancey (2), Sigafoos (2). Riddle (2>, Riggi Cooney. Two-base hits—Riddle 2). Cullop Delancey Three-base hit—Riggs. Stolen ba^i S n 7„ B r !? , Borgmann. Sacrifice b \ e play—Riddle to White to Riddle to White. Left on bases —Indianapohs, 8; Columbus, 4. Base on balls— Thomas, 1; off Winford, 4; off Dean l Struck out—By Thomas, 4; by Winford' 2 ; B°' en - 2 _ Hits—Off Thomas, 11 in B'l-i 2 ff B o ol f n '. 0 ln 2 * 3 inning; off thL n f2*vl' j 8 8 innings and one batte* in ntf V n £ ng; °? Teachout, 0 in 1-3 inn‘ng. off Dean, 2 in 1-3 inning. Wild pitch Dean. Winning pitcher—Bolen ii^ sl i\frf Pitcher—Dean. Umpires—McLaughlin and Goetz. Time of game—2:oß

Reynolds Heads Meridian Show Everything is set for tonight's wrestling card at the South Meridian street arena, with Jack Reynolds, world’s welterweight champion, and Jack Adams, scheduled to tangle in the top event for two falls out of three. This will be the first meeting of this pair, although bothare well known to local fans. Two other bouts of the two-three fall variety show Cyclone Burns against Steve Nenoff and a newcomer, Roy Allen, against Speedy Oneall. Joe Hollander meets Young Slaughter in the opener. HAWTHORN NET VICTOR Hawthorn tennis team turned in a double victory Thursday, beating Shelbyville, 4 to 0, and Danville, 4 to 1, on the East Thirty-eighth street courts. Only singles matches were played.

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INDIANAPOLIS, FRIDAY, JUNE 30, 1933

Marty Callaghan was sent up to bat for White as a starter in the Indians' half and singled to center. Angley went in to hit for Bolen and Bud Teachout, a southpaw, relieved Winford in the Columbus box and caused Tom to pop to Rothrock. Pilot Blades switched pitchers again as Layne batted and Paul Dean faced Herman, who also popped to Rothrock, making it two down and a runner on first. Cooney Delivers Dudley Lee smacked Dean for a whistling single to left, Callaghan pulling up at second. Johnny Cooney was equal to the occasion and slashed a single to left, scoring Callaghan with the tying run, Lee being held at second. Dean looked worried and was sweating like a horse. He lost control on Sigafoos and when the count grew to three and nothing Chief Blades ordered Sigafoos walked, filling the bases. It was all up to Fred Bedore. In the meantime Dean called time, used a towel to dry his hands and also made heavy use of the resin sack. The big fellow then took position, wound up and let ’er fly. The ball was high, catcher Delancey leaped and missed and it was a wild pitch, permitting Lee to trot in from third with the winning marker. The league lead of the Birds has been slashed to four games, with St. Paul second and the Indians third, just a few points back of the Apostles. The Tribe will tackle the Bucks again tonight and on Saturday night. The conflict tonight will be free to women in the grandstand and it will be “family night” in the bleachers. The Birds stacked up a lead of 3-to-0 before the Indians got under way Thursday, but the Tribe drew close by chalking two tallies in the third stanza, in the sixth the Hoosiers captured the lead, 4 to 3, only to be knocked back in the seventh when Columbus scored twice. Killefer Banished Riddle, with two doubles, and Sigafoos, with two singles, led the Tr;be attaok, each batting in two runs. Cullop and Delancey each hit in two markers for the visitors and Riggs belted in the other Bird tally. Manager Red Killefer was bounced off of the field in the third inning when he complained about pitcher Jim Winford’s “move” throwing to first base. Killefer accused Winford of balking, but the umpires turned a deaf ear to the protest and in no time at all umpire Goetz got hot under the collar and chased the Indian chieftain, leaving Bill Burwell to shoulder the managerial duties. The umpires evidently are “down” with the heat and are aroused to fury over wild protests. Bolen was credited with the victory and the defeat was chalked against Dean. The Birds “took” the Indians for a four straight here recently and the home boys are burning up to inflict stiff punishment on the A. A. pacemakers in the current series. AB H Pet. Sigafoos. if 291 116 .399 Coouev. D-of 183 57 .311 Wingard, if 260 80 .308 Bedore. if 192 59 .307 Chapman, of 219 62 .283 Callaghan, of 222 62 279 B'ddle. c 136 38 .279 White, if 203 52 .256 Anglev. c 138 35 .254 Layne. of 45 11 244 Lee. if 178 42 .236

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PLAYGROUND OF THE MIDDLE WESt

‘Ten —nnd Out!’ Here’s ‘Da Preem’ Winning Title

' ' 4.' M' NeSapfc [ 3 g w /BgL x tilimwHi ■3sgm& svW.-.-A-.y,Mw. ....... y.

The Times herewith presents tw r o interesting ringside action pictures of Primo Camera’s triumph over Jack Sharkey in the world’s heavyweight championship fight at New York Thursday night. The pictures were rushed here early this morning

Queen Helen Wins Again By United Press WIMBLEDON. England, June 30. —Mrs. Helen Wills Moody, defending title holder, moved a step nearer her sixth Wimbledon tennis championship today when she defeated Mme. Marie Henrotin of France, 6-3, 6-0, in the fourth round of the women’s singles. Junior Golfers Clash Aug. 7 By United Press SOUTH BEND, Ind., June 30. Date for the annual state junior golf tournament has been set definitely for Aug. 7-11 by officials of Erskine Club, the tournament site, announced today. More than one hundred high school and young college golfers from throughout the state are expected to make a bid for the title that Fritz Cox, Terre Haute, is too old to defend.

PAGE 22

by the NEA by telephoto via Chicago. At the top you see Camera (right) jabbing Sharkey in the first round. And below you see Sharkey

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Chuck Heads Parade CHUCK KLEIN. Indianapolis powerhouse, drove in all of the Phillies runs with two homers and two singles in four trips Thursday as the Phils beat Pittsburgh 6 to 4. He is leading his league with fifteen homers and a batting average of .371. He also is leading in hits and runs batted in. Whattaman!

stretched out on the canvas in the sixth round just after the championship had changed hands on a sharp right uppercut by Camera. The referee is shown waving Sharkey out after completing the count.

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Yanks Tie Senators New York Raps Cleveland, While Nats Bow to Detroit. By United Press NEW YORK. June 30—The New York Yankees advanced to a ti with Washington for first place in the American League by beating Cleveland. 9 to 3. Thursday, while the Senators lost to Detroit. 5 to 4. The Yanks hammered Hudlin, Bean and Harder for thirteen hits, including Frank Crosetti's eighthinning homer and Babe Ruth's double and two singles. Joe Vosmifc drove in all the Cleveland runs with a triple and two singles. Tigers Come Through Detroit downed Washington. 5 to 4. when Gerald Walker drove in the winning run in the ninth with a single when the bases w’ere loaded. Joe Kuhel made a homer for the Senators in the fourth. Philadelphia kept pace with New York by beating St. Louis. 4 to 1, after Bob Johnson's third-inning homer, with a man on base, and Jimmy Foxx' nineteenth four-bag-ger in the sixth, with one aboard. Homer Is “No Count” The New York Giants National League lead over St. Louis was cut to three and a half game?when the Giants lost to the Cards. 7 to 3. The Cards made seven hits in the third frame for six runs, sending Lefty Clark to the showers. Luque and Bell followed, the trio allowing twelve hits. Ethan Allen hit a homer for St. Louis in the second, but it didn’t count because he batted out of turn. Pittsburgh lost ground bv succumbing to Philadelphia, 6 to 4, after Chuck Klein drove in all the Philly runs with his fourteenth and fifteenth homers and tw r o singles in four tries. Chicago gained on the Pirates by beating Brooklyn, 7 to 2. The Dodgers were handicapped by the absence of first baseman Sam Leslie, ill from ptomaine poisoning, and outfielder Danny Taylor, suffering from an injured back. RIVER SWIM PLANNED By United Pre** NOBLESVILLE. Ind.. June 30. The Indiana-Kentucky A. A. U. river swimming championships for men and women will be held on White river near here July 23. Paul R. Jordan, district association president, announced today. The swims will be over two and three-mile courses, starting at state Road 13, four miles north of Noblesville. Entrants must be registered with the A. A. U. The Riverwood Aquatic Club is sponsoring the meet.