Indianapolis Times, Volume 48, Number 66, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 May 1936 — Page 25
MAY 27, 1936.
PROMISE OF SEEING ‘SATCH’ TUMBLE LURES FANS
Primo to Repeat Gigantic Collapse in Rematch With Haynes Tonight, Joe Opines Floundering Italian Is Goat Again as Black Menace No. 2 Attempt to Lower Knockout Time From Three Rounds to Two; Leroy’s Past Record Spotty. BY JOF. WILLIAMS Times Special Writer N£V/ YORK, May 27.—0n the promise that Old Satch. as Mr. Primo Camera Is inelegantly called, will execute another of his lionumental falls, a number of confirmed thrill seekers will make the trip across the bridge tonight to see what has been advertised as a heavyweight prize fight at Ebbetts Field. Old Satch will be in there against Leroy Haynes, a gentleman of color who 6eems to have become a native Philadelphian by way of South Bend, Ind. where in his youth he learned the Rockne shift, which is not to be confused with the Tommy Ryan shift or the day and night shift.
Semi-Pro, Amateur Baseball Notes Beech Grove Reds will play at Pendleton Saturday morning and will be host to Fortville Sunday. Mark Quackenbush is requested to call Cherry 4214-W between 5 and 8 and ask for Walter. Salvage Equipment Secos want a game for Sunday morning at Riverside No. 1. Write Abe Goldsmith, 703 W. New York-st, Indianapolis, or call Lincoln 1831 during the day. Roy Steele Red Sox will meet at 134 E. 22d-st Saturday at 8:30 for the trip to Bloomfield, where a dou-blp-header is scheduled. The Sox will play at Cambridge City Sunday. For a game Sunday or June 7, with the Jamestown Cubs, write Ralph Everhart, Jamestown, Ind. The Cubs defeated the Falls City Black Caps, 8 to 2. The Big Four Legion team will oppose the Indianapolis Orphans’ Home Sunday at 3 on Brookside No. 2 in a game that was postponed by rain last Sunday. The Big Four team will practice tomorrow at 5:15 at Riverside No. 9. Baby Lincolns are without a game for Sunday. The team won its fourth straight at Shelbyville, 4 to 2. For games write Earl Smith, 762 N. Sheflield-av, Indianapolis. New Ross has open dates in June and July. Write M. Huffman, New Ross, Tnd. Nick’s All-Stars Negro nine wants to schedule games. The team defeated the Greenfield Merchants, 4 to 2, in a ten-inning game with Bible’s home run featuring the victory. Write Daniel Mason, 1045 S. Capitol-av, Indianapolis. Standing of the Co-operative League follows: WL W L Beal Stile 4 1 ZtfTrtn 3 2 Roy Steele .... 4 1| Terminal 1 4 Malleable 3 2[Elt Lilly 0 5 Hudsons are to work out this evening at Garfield No. 3. A game for Sunday end other bookings In June are wanted. Write to Earl Beam. 1536 Gilbert-av, Indianapolis, or call Drexel 4213,-M. Bennett Coal nine will practice today at 4:30. All players notice. Real 8!lk downed Walts Terminals In (he Co-operative League. 18-13. The winners obtained 18 hits and the losers 13. rroflltf and Valent pitched for Real Silk and Weger. Durst and Graves for the Terminals. -laying errorless ball behind the twohit pitching of Chuck Waite, the Cumberland Merchants blanked the Link Belt nine, 10 to 0. Lefty Rode, outfielder for the Merchants led the batting for the winners with four hits out of five times. Waite and Wheatley formed the Cumberland bat.terv. Next Sunday the Merchants meet the Mohawk Indians at the Cumberland diamond. Freetown Merchants defeated Seymour. 1 to 0, at Freetown. Nick’s All-Stars defeated Greenfield. 4 to 3. in a 10-inning tussle. Jackson of the winners struck out 12. The batting of Bible and the fielding of Campbell, also of the Stars, featured the attack by the Indianapolis team. Americans Ousted From English Meet /?;/ United Press ST. ANDREWS. Scotland, May 27. —The last American passed from th* British amateur golf championship today when Theodore Bassett of Westchester defaulted in the third round to Gerald Micklem, former Oxford University golfing letterman. Bassett, who had drawn a firstround bye and who won by default in the second round, failed to appear on the first tee this morning. Micklem waited on the tee 10 minutes and then Bassett was disqualified.
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Public Sale The delinquent pledge* will b Kold at Public Auction June S, 19.30. at 0 a. m., by Wolf Stutsman, Inc., 23# W. Washington St.—Pledge numbers: 20A4 1851 2252 CIS! 2144 2117 IMS I<M4 2412 2)70 2070 2nfi,7 1931 2.: ii V4W 2173 2034 •-# is#l 22144 2239 2ir.7 2010 203S 2340 174(1 2233 21.1 l 2003 2b*S 2001 1720 1010 1437 1292 2312 1W 170.1 1192 IMO 1312 2392 2323 1043 1130 H',l 13W 2'.0 2478 1029 1512 2148 ird3 239
It appears that this, in the manner speaking, is to be a race against time. Several weeks ago the Haynes person stopped Old Satch in three
rounds, so the ciftrent idea, if any, is to see if the gentle man can repeat the p e r f o rmance in two rounds. Should Haynes prove successful in this, a third engagement will be arranged in which he will strive to stop Old Satch in one round, and so on
Williams
until both the problem and Old Satch have been reduced to the irreducible minimum, after which all and sundry will adjourn for tea and crumpets. In case you have not been following fistic affairs, as the Vassar girls say, very closely, it may interest you to know that brother Haynes is being groomed as Black Menace No. 2. OS course, Joe Louis is Black Menace No. 1. Just what Haile Selassie's rating is now is not known. It may be he never was a black menace. Still, no one can say his footwork wasn’t superb. tt a BROTHER HAYNES arrived at his present position by taking on some of Louis’ battered victims and battering them even more thoroughly. He stopped Camera in three rounds against six for the ac e menace and stiffened Natie Brown in two rounds after the latter had lasted the limit with Louis. It is always easy to take this sort of material and weave it into realistic copy and the gentlemen back of Brother Haynes have not been remiss in their obligations in this respect. If in presenting their case they failed to mention that Brother Haynes had previously been smacked around by Maxie Rosenbloom, a light-heavyweight, and out-staggered by A1 Ettore, this may be set down merely as an oversight. Very likely there will be a great deal of critical interest in the local appearance of the Black Menace No. 2, but just as surely the promise of another gigantic collapse on the part of Old Satch will have its compelling lure, and it is to be hoped he will not disappoint his many admirers. ROMAN SOLDIER ENTERS CHICAGO, May 27. Roman Soldier, second to Omaha in the 1935 Kentucky Derby, will race at Arlington Park here in the meeting that opens on June 29. The star will be entered in at least three rich events, including the Inaugural Handicap.
menm^rSßtes Dress Models Sport Styles 2^o
Standings and .Results
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION W L Pet. Kansas Citr 24 12 .867 Milwaukee 24 IS .649 Minneapolis 22 15 .595 St. Paul 23 17 .575 Louisville 17 23 .425 INDIANAPOLIS It 19 .424 Columbua 16 24 .400 Toledo 10 27 .270 AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. New York 25 13 .658 Boston 25 14 .841 Detroit 21 17 .555. Chicago 18 16 .529 Cleveland 19 n .528 Washington 20 19 .513 Philadelphia 11 24 .314 St. Louis 9 28 .243 NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. St. Louis 24 11 .686 New York 23 12 .657 Chicago 17 17 .500 Pittsburgh 17 18 .486 Boston 17 19 .472 Cincinnati 17 19 .472 Brooklyn 14 23 .378 Philadelphia .. 14 24 .363 Games Today AMERICAN ASSOCIATION INDIANAPOLIS at Columbus. Toledo at Louisville. St. Paul at Milwaukee. Minneapolis at Kansas City. AMERICAN LEAGUE Chicago at Detroit. New York at Boston. St. Louis at Cleveland. Philadelphia at Washington. NATIONAL LEAGUE Cincinnati at Chicago. Pittsburgh at St. Louis. Brooklyn at New York. Boston at Philadelphia. Bruce Campbell Out of Hospital Cleveland Player May See Action by July 1. By United Press BOSTON, May 27.—Hopes of Cleveland’s faltering American League Indians were bolstered today by announcement of Bruce Campbell’s physician that the player will : be back in the game “by July I—if not sooner.’’ Campbell was stricken with a third attack of spinal meningitis April 30 while en route here from New York with his teammates. It was a recurrence of a malady he suffered last August and again in October. He was discharged froma hospital late today.
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. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Results Yesterday AMERICAN ASSOCIATION [Toledo 100 000 010— 2 8 0 Louisville -200 022 10X— 7 16 2 Hare, Thomas and Garbark; Marrow and Thompson. St. Paul 000 000 000— 0 9 2 Milwaukee 204 000 OOx— 6 7 0 Weinert. Trow and Pasek; Johnson and Brenzel. Minneapolis 000 120 301— 7 6 3 Kansas City 000 100 003— 414 3 McKain. Tauacher and Georga; Niggel- | ing, Moncriel and Madjeski. AMERICAN LEAGUE (First Game> | Chicago 011 100 024 9 14 2 Detroit 223 500 OOx—l2 16 1 Whiteh’ad. Brown and Sewell. Shea; Crowder. Kimsev and Cochrane. (Second Game) Chicago 000 005 103— 0 15 0 Detroit 000 000 011— 2 7 0 Cain and Sewell: Auker. Lawson and Cochrane. Hayworth. St. 200 000 114— 8 11 1 Cleveland 000 300 002— 5 7 2 Hogsett and Hemsley; Harder, Lee. Galehouse and Pytlak. Philadelphia 001 000 1 00— 2 8 4 Washington 010 022 03x— 8 13 0 Rhodes. Turbeville and Moss; Whitehill and Bolton. New York 101 000 002— 4 10 1 Boston 001 200 02x— 5 9 0 Ruffing and Dickey, Gtenn; W. Ferrell and Berg. NATIONAL LEAGUE (First Game) Pittsburgh 002 000 000— 3 7 0 St. Louis 000 032 Olx— 6 9 0 Blanton. Bush and Padden; J. Dean and Ogrodowski. (Second Game) Pittsburgh 000 000 200— 2 2 2 St. Louis 010 000 50x— 6 4 0 Birkofer, Weaver. Brown and Todd: Winford and Davis. Ogrodowski. Boston 000 001 010— 2 11 0 Philadelphia 230 100 Olx— 7 17 1 Benge, Smith and Lopez: Jorgens and Grace. Cincinnati 101 ono 200— 4 10 2 Chicago 007 020 Olx—lo 15 0 Stine Brennan. Prey and Lombardi: Henshaw and Hartnett. Brooklyn 000 000 012— 3 7 1 New York 103 200 Olx— 7 H 3 Clark. Butcher. Baker and Phelps: Gumbert and Mancuso. On College Diamonds Notre Dame, 3; Northwestern, 0. Washington College, 18; Western Maryland, 4. Penn State, 6; Muhlenberg, 4. Illinois Wesleyan, 6; Illinois Normal, 0. | PANTS SOT4jT Oxford Gray and M Dark Blue rale I FHM TAILORING LUVII COMPANY Mass. Ave. and E. New York
Kentucky Courtmen Down Indiana , 5-4 Time* Special LEXINGTON. Ky, May 27.—Indiana University’s tennis team bowed to the strong University of Kentucky court squad here yesterday, 5 to 4. The Wildcats won four singles and one doubles match to hang up the eleventh triumph of the season. The contests concluded the schedule for
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the local team which had the most successful record in the history of the school. Shortridge Netmen at Franklin Today With eight straight triumphs achieved by the shut-out method. Shortridge High School’s tennis team is scheduled for matches at Franklin today. The Blue Devil courtmen blanked the Broad Ripple
netmen yesterday at the Hawthorn <*FI I IK YnilO ■■■■ courts 7 to 0. Summary: ij®" tLU HH Singles—Lafollette <S) defeated'® AIJ Ilf -1 _ I Foxworthy. 6-0. 6-0; Scott iS) de- H lIJQ ff dIGiIBS seated Cork, 6-0, 6-0; Lathrop <S ■ defeated Brittenbach. 6-0, 6-0. ■ Broken or Any Condition. I Powell *S) defeated Kelly. 6-1. 6-fC H Chains, Rings. Dental. Sil- I Anderson (S defeated Hines, 6*4, H verware, Ciold Filled Jew- b 6-1. , ■ elry. Cash for Diamonds. Doubles—Hancock and Eldndge INHI AN APDI IQ (S) defeated Foxworthy and Cork.!® 6-1, 6-1, and Flickinger and Likely II GOLD-SILVER Cos. I (S> defeated Kelly and Brittenbach, i ■_ _| 6-2. 6-2. E. Wash. St.®J|
PAGE 25
KING BEATft MEXICAN LOS ANGELES. May 27. Pepe Del Rio. Mexican heavyweight, lasted two rounds against King LeVinsky, Chicago, here last night.
