Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 January 1937 — Page 14

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By Eddie Ash

GOLDEN GLOVES APPEAL SOARS

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INTERNATIONAL SHOW INCLUDED

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THE appeal of Golden Gloves is greater this year with more amateur boxers than ever before and the entry

“list in all tournaments connected with the Chicago Tribune

charity enterprise will exceed 21,000. . . . They represent the vast area between the Alleghanies and the Rockies, and the Gulf of Mexico and the Canadian border. . . . The second night of fighting in The Times-Legion Golden Gloves

- classic will be Friday of this week at the Armory and other . local tourney dates are Feb. 5 and 12. . . . Indianapolis

winners in the Open class will compete in the Tournament of Champions at Chicago, Feb. 22, 23 and 24. . . . Survivors will return to Chicago for the finals March 5 and the victors will represent the West against the Eastern Golden Gloves team in Chicago on March 24. After this will come an international battle between the Chicago Western Golden Gloves champions and the combined strength of Europe in the amateur fistic field, at the Chicago Stadium on May 28. . ... It will be the old

“world against the new. ... Among the countries competing

for the European team are Italy, England, Germany, Ire-

~“land, Hungary, I’oland, Finland, Sweden and Belgium.

2 2 2 # Ed zn

MEMBER of the 1929 Chicago Golden Gloves team was Barney Ross, who fought his way to the title in the 126-pound division and later whipped the champion Golden Gloves featherweight from New York. . .. Then Barney went on to beconie professional welterweight champion of the world. . . . He was the first world title holder to be developed in a Golden Gloves tournament. . . . Willie Hoppe and Jake Schaefer, friendly enemies for a decade, are wagerihg $1000 each on

_ their new 28.2 balkline cue match which opens in Chicago tonight.

. . . They also will split the major portion of the gate receipts on a 60-40 basis. . . . It's a 10-block affair of 2500 points. , . . In France 28.2 is called super balkline. 2 " 8 3 8 2 a AMMY BYRD, former big league outfielder now with the Rochester

Internationals, won the second annual Baseball Players’ National golf tourney at Sarasota, Fla, by 14 strokes. . . . His T72-hole aggregate

. was 284. . .. Garland Braxton, Milwaukee's southpaw pitcher, took sec-

ond with 298. . . . Byrd's eligibility was questioned before the tourney because of pro golf connections. . . . He has been a star for years on the links and is a far better hitter with the driver than with the bat. . . . Johnny Cooney, Roy Spencer and Butch Henline, former Indianapolis players, competed at Sarasota. . . . Lloyd Brown, Cleveland hurler, was third; Paul Waner, Pittsburgh fly chaser, was tourth, and Paul Derringer, Cincy pitcher, was fifth. . . . Dizzy Dean was an also ran. . .. Byrd plays too much golf for the other diamond pastimers to have a chance with him in tourney competition and may retire from baseball to become a full-fledged golf pro.

2 2 4 HH ” ”

(once PAYNE, the Indianapolis Indians’ former relief pitcher, has been appointed manager of the Decatur: club of the Three-I League. . .. The team has joined the St. Louis Cardinal chain. ... Payne is an Indianapolis resident. . . . The complete “missionary” corps of the American League now numbers five. . . . They are Lew Fonseca, George Moriarty, Roger Peckinpaugh, Cy Perkins and Jack Quinn, ... In charge of educational movies. . . . At Alamo Downs race track the other day the riding contract of Jockey Charles Parke was swapped for two horses. . . . Old Joe Cantillon of baseball fame once traded a pitcher for a bird dog. n = ” 2 ” ” SWIMMING meet scheduled between Wayne University of Detroit and the University of Cincinnati was called off on account of high water. . ... Flood conditions prevented Cincy from assembling its squad. . . . Despite their record of five straight defeats in the Big Ten, there are only three teams in the loop that average more than a point better defensively than the winless Chicago Maroons. . . . Bob Feller, young strike-out artist of the Cleveland staff, will be taken under the wing of Coach George Uhle, who “knows all there is to know about pitching.” 4 #2 # 2 ” # FJ In eliminating the center tip-¢ff from Olympic Games basketball play. the International Amateur Basketball Federation Congress decided that after a score, the ball would be put in play by the scoredupon team, from a point at the end-court line under its own basket.

Cardinals Pull Catcher Out of Bag Each Season

By HARRY GRAYSON NEA Sports Editor Although first rate catchers are almost as scarce as good heavyweights, the St. Louis Cardinals manage to bob up with one each spring. It seems that all the Red Birds® have to do is ship a young man to

lago—he was just Bob Pastor.

their Columbus farm. Bill DeLancey, Ken O'Dea, Brusie Ogrodowski, and now Arnold Owen. They'll do until a brighter quartet of young receivers comes along on

. one club in successive years.

Not a few trained observers suspect that “Mickey” Owen will go farther than any of them. The Springfield, Mo., kid who came to the Cardinal organization from the sandlots of Los Angeles, has it all —speed, arm, bat and intelligence.

And He's Only 20

And not the least important is the fact that Owen, who is only 20, will assert himself. Most of. the peagreens gulped their Adam’s -apples when Branch dickey visited the - chain gang's recruit training camp at Bartow, Fla., last spring, but not Owen. He ankled right up to the director

of the far-flung Cardinal system, | . and chirped, “Harya, Branch, old |

scout!” Owen is the popoft in an inoffensive way. a great battery partner illustrious Dizzy Dean, well to get a word in while Owen is around. Transferred to Avon Park, where the Columbus and Rochester outfits prepared, Owen was given every opportunity to make good. After informing all the Avon Park waitresses that he was the “Red Birds’ regular catcher for 1936,” he proceeded to prove it. Brighter Than O'Dea, Ogrodowski

type, but He'd make for the who'll do edgeways

DeLancey was a little more pol-

ished, but Owen, a cousin of Detroit’'s Marvin, who never says a word, is farther advanced than either O'Dea or Ogrodowski at a corresponding stage of their careers. The Cardinal management either has a deal on for a catcher or sublime faith in Owen, for it has disposed of the veteran Virgil Davis. That leaves only Ogrodowski and Paul Chervinko, for Delancey, now . fighting in Arizona to regain his health, won't be back until 1938, if then.

Chervinko also comes up from

Columbus. A product of the Uni- |

versity of Illinois, he has had con- « siderable experience, and perhaps is ready to catch major leagué ball. . Chervinko, who is 26, hit .275 to Owen's .336 with Columbus, and is ' not quite as fast as the kid crashing * the majors in his third year out. The Chicago Cubs, Detroit Tigers, Cincinnati Reds and Cleveland Indians tried to buy Owen from the Cardinal layout. Owen is the product of the Man-

chester Playgrounds cf Los Angeles, where he played with an American Legion team. He tried out with the Los Angeles Coasters in 1934, but weighed only 150 pounds and failed to impress those in charge of the Cubs’ subsidiary, so he went back and graduated from high school, where he played ball and won medals as a wrestler. Owen gained 20 pounds in the next year, and now stands 5 feet 1615 and weighs ‘175 pounds. He is a right-handed batter lacking the power of the left-handed hitting DzLancey. John Angell, Cardinal scout, spotted and signed Owen in the winter of 1934. He was sent to his old home town, Springfield, in the Western Association, where he bat-

ted .310. Started as Shortstop

Owen started out to be a shortstop and Rickey had Burt Shotton give him a whirl there last season, but it was decided that catching was his forte. Owen was a youngster when his father died from the effects of a gas attack during the World War. Rickey would not have peddled O'Dea to the Chicago Cubs had he dreamed that illness was to interrupt what promised to be ‘a brilliant major league career for DeLancey at the very outset. But B. R. appears to have picked ap another future great in Arnold Malcolme Owen. He caught in the Western Association’s all-star game of 1935, the American Association’s all-star game of 1936, and some have an idea that he may come fast enough to catch in the majors’ allstar game of 1937. /

NEXT OLIVER RING PROGRAM ON FEB. 3

The next amateur boxing and wrestling show at the Oliver A. C. gym, Oliver and Warren Aves. will be held Wednesday night, Feb. 3, Tom Leeper, chief trainer, announced today. No program will be staged tonight, he said. A complete card for the Feb. 3 entertainment will be arranged later. 1

Louis Cause Of Bob's Rise

That College Man Rose On Joe’s Fame.

By JOE WILLIAMS Times Special Writer NEW YORK, Jan. 25.—A young man by the name of Bob Pastor fights Joe Louis in this town Friday night. Quite suddenly Bob Pastor becomes a somebody. Every detail of his 22 years is put into type. Day after day his name is in the headlines. A year ago—even less than a year He was fighting in the small clubs. Only firmed resin sniffers knew who he was. A game, young kid, doing the best he could against nondescript opposition. Even when he won it was not a story of importance. In those days nobody cared about Bob Pastor’s background. If you mentioned he was an offshoot of the famous Rose Stokes family, the answer was “what of it?” If you mentioned he was a college man, it

Williams

meant even less. If you mentioned— ! Well it didn’t matter what you;

mentioned—he was just another young guy tossing leather. Finally he was matched with Louis. Immediately he became a personality. The quick and magic touch to prominence seems just that... . I mean to say that as scon as you are matched with Louis you become a headline figure. And of course this is easy to understand.

There is always a “B” to every “A.”

But the interesting point in this case is that if it wasn’t for Louis— or somebody like him—you would never have heard of Pastor.

Does It Mean Anything?

The ironical touch is that Louis came up from the swamplands of the deep South without any education and he is, because of his position in the fight game, the instrument by which the New York college man becomes a household word, whatever a household word may mean, go What does this prove2 It probably doesn’t prove anything beyond the fact that prize fighting is a sphere unto its own. I always have thought the prize ring offered the most con-

venient approach to what some peo- |

ple call fame. I wonder if it isn't true that more people know who John L. Sullivan was than Thomas Jefferson. Or if they aren't more conversant with Gene Tunney’s background than Thomas Edison's. And so far as posterity is concerned what would Sullivan or Tunney—iust to mention two—be if they hadn’t been in the prize ring? Who Cares, Anyway? But I seem to be getting worked up over a matter of small importance— Who cares about that? The vital fact is that Bob Pastor is to meet

Joe Louis and that the meeting has¥

some bearing on the heavyweight championship.. Boiled down, the thing can have only one point of interest—who will win? This, in the final analysis, is the only reason why “A” is matched with “B.” There must be that feeling that one man can beat the other, or at least that he has a chance. All the dope, all the circumstances, all the this and that would seem to argue in favor of a complete rout— but the big physical, material fact remains that until the fight is over nobody can be absolutely sure. There is talk that Louis is a 10-to-1 shot over Pastor. This can be nothing but talk. When ihe odds are that high there is no betting. Per-sonally-I feel that Louis is a 20 to 1 shot. But that is just one man’s opinion. Pastor will come into the ring with two fists. It so happens that Louis can’t possibly come into the ring with any more.

Speed Is. What Counts I have gotten over the fault of

accepting foregone conclusions as

such just because they seem to be that. I saw Louis cut to pieces and knocked out by Max Schmeling. I didn’t think that possibly could happen, but it did. Who am I then, to say that Pastor hasn't got a chance? To be perfectly frank I don’t know whether he has or hasn’t. Off hand I would say no. I have seen him fight and he hasn't the speed that Louis owns. It so happens that you win or lose by speed in the prize ring. The lethal effect of the fist is measured by the speed by which it is thrown, nothing else. Louis throws a fist as speedily as

one has ever been thrown. I didn’t

see Fitzsimmons but this certainly goes for Dempsey. But there is such

a thing as slowing up Joe's speed. it up and he

Schmeling slowed slowed it up by the simple expedient of hitting him on the chin before he got started.

Louis Gets Confused This happens to be Louis’ weakness. Jack Johnson calls him a dumb fighter. I don’t think he’s overly bright myself. He doesn’t seem to

Additional Sports” on Page 14

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MONDAY,

PASTOR DEVELOPS NEW

JANUARY 25, 1937

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PAGE 13

Not Too Old to Learn

Francis Francis, famous English golfer, is headed for Boca Raton, Fla., where he Tommy Armour. his instructor abroad. ;

will take lessons from Henry Cotton was

NG PERSONALITY.

From His Left to His Right—tl:

In Public Eye |

Williams Believes It Ironical |

Feint

Hook 3

Set

Uppercut

e¢ Brown Bomber, Joe Louis

Mary Ann

Patty Berg Favored As Champions Meet

By United Press PUNTA GORDA, Fla. Jan. 25.— Patty Berg, Minneapolis, fresh from a triumph in the Augusta Titleholder tournament, was top favorite as many of the nation’s finest feminine golfers prepared for today’s first round in the Charlotte Harbor Championship of Champions. Freckle-faced Patty won the title last year by rallying brilliantly in the finals to defeat Maureen Orcutt Crews, Miami veteran of the links.

Catcher Madjeski Bought by Giants

By United Press NEW YORK. Jan. 25.—Outright purchase of Ed Madjeski, a catcher, from the Kansas City Club of the American Association, was . announced today by the New York Giants. Madjeski may be ‘retained as second string catcher. The Giants have been seeking such a player for some time. The Giants’ office also announced purchase from the Philadelphia Phillies of Infielder Jose Gomez and Outfielder Ernie Sulik. They were purchased for use at the Giants’ Jersey City farm club.

weight title. ® Young Corbett held the welterweight title in one of the shortest reigns in the history of boxing. Now after trying his hand at managing, seconding, promoting and training, Corbett, at the age of 31, is back in the ring—because it offers the best possibility of all for making money. He has his first test in this come- | back campaign here on Feb. 22 against an opponent as yet unnamed. :

" Works Out Daily

ve tried. everything else,” Corbett said today after a brisk workout at a local gymnasium. “And I didn't seem to make much of a g0. Perhaps I can do better with fighting? So why not fight? I tried insurance, managing fighters and promoting fights.” How about his age? Didn't Corbett think he was a bit too old to resume another ring career? “No,” he replied. “I'm just a kid compared to some of those oldtimers who used to keep going until

PB know what to do when he's been hit. The resultant confusion slows up his speed. He still seems to be hitting * just as hard but nothing happens. So what? So in Pastors case, it would seem that if he is to have a chance he must hit Louis early, get him confused, make him fight his kind of fight, and go on to win, or at least last the limit. This possibility very definitely exists. There is also the possibility that Louis may hit Pastor early and that will be that. Louis hits hard enough to knock all sorts of strategy out of anybody's mind—even a college man’s. And being a simple-minded person whose fighting intellect. rests mainly in his knuckles, you can rest

assured he will be operating along these lines.

“1!

20 Swim Events Onl. A.C. Program

Heading the program fer the Indianapolis Athletic Club's swimming championships Saturday night will

‘be the 1937 national junior A. A. U.

men’s 50-yard free-style swim. Entries for the event will close Wednesday with Dick Papenguth, I. A. C. athletics director. Twenty events, five of them championship affairs, are on the program which is to get underway at 8:15 p. m. Women's events are the Middle States A. A. U. 50-yard free-style; Indiana-Kentucky A. A. U. 50-yard breast-stroke, and an open 50-yard free-style swim for girls 12 years of age and under. A men’s Middle States 100-yard back-

stroke completes the championship :

swims. Entry blanks will be sent out this week for two more national junior aquatic events to be staged in the I. A. C. tank Feb. 27. These events, awarded to the local club at the last national meeting of the A. A. U, will be: the men’s lowboard diving and women’s 100-yard back-stroke. Middle States and Indiana-Ken-tucky A. A. U. events also will be conducted on Feb. 27.

Young Corbett Returns To Boxing Game at 31

By HENRY SUPER United Press Staff Correspondent SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 25.—Raffeli Giordano—Young orbett III to boxing fans—is hitting the come-back trail, hoping to capture the middle-

they were 40. Mike McTigue, Jack Britton, Tiger Flowers and a lot of them kept on going. Tommy Loughran had good success at 35.” Corbett, as a fighter, is unusual-— for he does his own matchmaking. He has a trainer—John Burdick— but he signs all his own contracts.

Last Bout in September

Corbett’s last fight was in September when he defeated Joe Bernal in Fresno. Then he retired and tried several other ventures.

He wants to fight Fred Apostoli;

young San Francisco middleweight sensation. Apostoli, incidentally, is a good friend of Corbett for they both were managed by Larry White. “Apostoli is my friend,” Corbett said, “but I still want to fight him. And I think I can lick him. If I do well in a couple of fights, I'll be glad of a-chance to meet him. A lot of people thought I quit the game because White was made manager of Apostoli. + That had nothing to do with it. I just thought ** was through. But as long as I'm getting back into harness, why not fight Apostoli.” : «Corbett looks in ‘good condition. He weighed 156 for his last scrap— and scales around 164 today. He hopes to get down to around 158 for his middleweight campaign.

WJRLD MARKS CLAIMED

By United Press OSLO, Norway, Jan. 25.—Three new. world's ice skating records for women were claimed today by ‘Schou Neilsen, pretty schoolgirl winner of last year’s downhill olympic ski race. The trim Norwegian miss yesterday skated 500 meters in 57.9 seconds: 1500 meters in 2 minutes, 11.1 seconds; and 3000 meters in 5:47.5.

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‘By HENRY M'LEMORE

i nited Press Staff Correspondent

SARASOTA, Fla,

san. 25.—With more than $100,000 in the bank, a

clear deed to a speciol: home safely tucked away in the bureau drawer and unlimited credis with the butcher and baker, Dizzy Dean is prepared to quit baseball u less the St. Louis Cardinals offer him $50,000 for

the 1637 season. 3 I got this informafon from a source even more ur mpeachable than Dean himself-—1i:mely, Mrs. Pat Dean, his wife, alfiolute monarch of the Dizzy one’s: doings. Mrs. Dean makes the deeisiins ‘in their household. Her word is aw, because Ol’ Diz loves her more {an he does a one-hit game, and iru its her business sense as implicitly as he does his fast, high one whe three are on in the ninth. He I talked to Pat—o2ve wvbody calls her that—on the porch if the Bobby Jones Golf Club here ari she pulled no punches. r J Not Ready Last: Vear “Branch Rickey sigiizd us last year only because te !lidn't have enough money to tell [im to quit gthering us and go or: back to St. uis and do his fancy! :alking and shouting where we c¢ildn’t hear him. We just couldn’t afiord to defy him. This year things & e different. We've got enough in ile bank to live on the rest of our s, and we don’t sign for one pen: y less than fifty thousand. It's fifi: grand or we don’t pitch.” fi It perhaps should Lb: explained that Mrs. Dean always. uses “we,”

-more than all the editor; and Lind-

bergh combined. In :beaking of Dizzy’s pitching she alw: ys says “we won a tough one in Eston,” “we dropped one to the Brees in Boston,” “we dropped one t¢ the Braves in 10 innings,” and “w:: didn't get enough rest on the last [ip through the West.” 5 Mrs. Dean asked me [0 make it plain that when the titi: came for Dizzy to sign this year; here would be none of the “morikefly business of last year.” ie “I would like the Amg¢ ican baseball fans to know: jui; how we stand. They pay us our living and they have a right to kni wv. You tell ‘em that the only trout e between us and the Cardinal bctses is that they don’t wait to pay 1s what we deserve. We draw thouszids of dollars through the gases, :nd believe me we are worth a lot! more than they want to pay us.

No Monkey Busines: Now “This year there will ‘tie none of

the monkey business of s¢cret meet-

ings with Rickey, aad jie talk of us hiding out in the woq ls and refusing to talk with him. He knows what we want and if !lje doesn't want to pay it he’ can wery well stay in St. Louis and teach his pet dog tricks, take up airpl.ne flying, or play shuffleboard... “We don’t want to see I m or hear from him until he has |) contract for fifty thousand in fs pocket. Of course, he won't:stay up there. He'll come down and try and overpower us with his sweet smile and mile-a-minute flow of oily gab. But he won't fool us. This tiiie we are ready—and able—to tell [iim to go fly his kite.” i ® Mrs. Dean is nore toc satisfied with the way the Carcs handle Dizzy. She is certain tat he is overworked. | “We played in 51 games last year, and that’s too many. If tiey would

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let us take our regular turn and no more we'd win 35 or 40 ball games without any trouble. Last year we won 13 and lost only two by the middle of June. Then they worked us like a mule and we went 35 days without a win. That shows something.” I asked Mrs. Dean if it was true, as Rickey told newspapermen last year, that she attempted to insert a clause in Dizzy's contract which would forbid the: Cardinals from publicizing him a “Dizzy,” and force them fo always use. his full and correct name of Jerome Herman. “If Rickey said that he is a liar, and a big one,” was her none tco evasive answer. ‘His nickname has been a great help to him. Paul Dean hates to be called ‘Daffy,’ but Dizzy likes Dizzy. That's all I call him.”

Lamb Is Winner Of Skating Title

By United Press OCONOMOWOC, Wis., Jan. 25. —

Hoosier Aquatic Squad Is Winner

The Hoosier Athletic Club men's swimming team defeated the Columbus (Ind.) Boys’ School squad Saturday night at the local pool in the first meet of the season by a 37-47 score. Members of the H. A. C. women’s team were scheduled to face the tanksters from the Muncie Y. W, C. A., but illness prevented the up-

state representatives from appeare ing. Exhibition swimming from rf

members of the women’s team pre- *

ceeded the other match. More than one hundred and fifty were present.

Only two swimmers from the downstate city placed first. Roger Rominer took the 400-yard relay and Charles Williams the 60-yard dash.

The Hoosier team took first place in seven events. Howard Krick was first in the 100-yard breast-stroke and diving events; Gus Grenz, 1006 yard back-stroke; John Barkhaus, 440-yard free-style; Louis Mahern, 100-yvard free-style and Ziegler Dietz, 200-yard free-style. The -lo=

cal team won the 300-yard medlay

relay.

Sabin Wins Florida Tennis Championship

By United Prcss ORLANDO, Fla., Jan. 25.—Wayne Sabin, San Francisco tennis ace, today held the Florida Open tennis

victory in the half-mile and 92ne-

championship. He defeated Elwood Cooke, Los Angeles, here yesterday, 6-1, 6-3, 6-4. Mrs. Catherine Sample, Miami, won from Miss Eunice Evers, Miami, 6-1, 2-6, 8-6. The final set was a thriller with the outcome in doubt until the last ball was volleyed. Arthur Hendrix, Lakeland, Fla. and Walter Senior, San Francisco, took the doubles title by defeating Cooke and W. B. Marcum, 6-4, 6-2, 6-4.

Delbert Lamb of Milwaukee, American Olympic skater, and Maddy Horn of Beaver Dam today had added the senior men’s and women’s Great Lakes Open Ice-Skating championships to their string. Both won the titles in the second and concluding day of competition yesterday. Lamb rolled up a total of 170 points to heat Bob Petersen, another Milwaukee skater, who scored 99 points. Alex Hurd, former Canadian now from St. Louis, was third with 40 points. Miss Horn shattered a pair of national records as she sped to

JACKETS BEAT ROVERS By United Press NEW YORK, Jan. 25.—The largest crowd ever to witness an amateur hockey game in New York City, 15,497, watched the Pittsburgh Yellow Jackets defeat the New York Rovers, 3-1, here yesterday in an Eastern Amateur Hockey League game. g

mile events for a winning point score of 120. She covered the halfmile in 1:268 and the mile in 3:06. Betty Boehmer, Chicago, was second with 80 points.

Sports Are Stressed

For Next World Fair NEW YORK, Jan. 25 (NEA) —New York’s world fair, to open in March,

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