Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 February 1937 — Page 17
MONDAY, FEB. 1, 1937
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Ea ch meat Sadr wie HORE
PAGE 17
- ODDS ARE AGAINST BRADDOCK-LOUIS FIGHT IN JUNE
Ball State Entertains I. u. ‘Tonight
Purdue’s Five to Travel to
Notre Dame for Game Wednesday Night.
After two weeks of cramming and | mental stress, members of Indiana college and university basketball teams are ready to open the second half of the season with examinations out of the way. This week's card is one of the | most interesting in the last month. | It contains 19 games to be played | among the Hoosier colleges. | Outstanding on the card is thc game between the traditional rivals, Wabash and Butler. Both teams | have suffered from lack of efperis enced players. The Bulldogs, labor- | ing under something of a jinx which has limited them to two victories during the season, will travel to | Crawfordsville for the game tomor- | row night. Indiana-Ball State Tonight The game between Indiana, de- | feated Saturday night by Loyola of | Chicago, and Ball State, at the] Muncie school’s gym, is a complete | sell-out. The original allotment of | 1000 tickets was gone two hours | after the sale opened, Jan. 4. After | continued requests, all of the avail- | abie 3600 seats were placed on the reserve list and all were sold within | a few days Indiana defeated the Cardinals last year by a score of 44-28, but the Ball State five is rated as a faster and smoother quintet than it was last year ang there may be fireworks. Indiana will pick up its Big Ten battles where it left off and play lowa Saturday at Iowa City. It will be the first Big Ten game that the Hoosiers will play without the services of Fred Fechtman, their tall center. The Fightin’ Hoosiers won their first game with Iowa, earlier this season, by a 28-24 score. Irish Face Two Games Notre Dame has one of its toughest weeks with two of the strongest Big Ten teams on its schedule. Wednesday night it takes on Purdue on the Irish floor and Saturday night it will entertain the University of Illinois’ Conference leaders. | All tickets for the Purdue game | were solid last week and a virtual sell-out is expected for the Illinois | tilt early this week. The ambitious Ball State outfit is | to play the fast Manchester team | Friday night in what should prove | one of the tightest games of the! week. | The complete schedule follows: Tonight—Indiana at Ball State. Tomorrow—Butler at Wabash, In- | diana Central at Indiana State, | Manchester at Valparaiso. Wednesday—Eariham at
| Ball]
State, Purdue at Notre Dame.
Thursday—Franklin at, DePauw |
Wabash at Evansville, Hanover at | Oakland City. Friday—Ball State at Manchester, | Anderson at Indiana Central. Saturday — DePauw at Earlham, | Central Normal at Butler, Indiana | at Towa, Indiana State at Valpa- | raiso, Illinois at Notre Dame, Indi- | ana Central at Xavier, St. Joseph's at Huntington, Concordia at Taylor,
Hollinger Bests | Skeet Shooters
Dutch Hollinger shattered 22 of 25
targets to win the handicap event in the Indianapolis Skeet Club benefit shoot yesterday. A total of $84.25] was collected and will be given to| the Red Cross for flood relief work. | Seventy-eight marksmen partici- | pated in the event. Hollinger defeated seven others | after all had ended the handicap with a score of 50. Others in the | tie were C. T. Evans, «J. Stephens, | Eddie Richards, D. Hood, Ww. | Vaughn, J. O. Baldridge Jr. and | Spud Spalding. | Phil Shore broke 44 of 50 targets | to take top honors in the principal skeet event at the Capital City Gun | Club yesterday. Garry Winders l:ad a perfect score in the 23-target skeet test and Richard Vandiver smashed 23 of 25 for first in the 410 guage event. Hanshew won the trapshoot, cracking 20 of 25 targets.
Win Matches Again
Times Special
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Feb. 1.— |
Indiana University’s wrestling team
continued today undefeated in duai |
meets after it had downed the! Chicago All-Stars, 20-6, here Saturday night. It was the Fightin’ | Hoosiers’ 34th consecutive victory. The summary follows: 118 Pounds—Myers Livivith (C): 7:52. 126 Pounds—Lefiton sioned Antenucci, 3:14. 135 Pounds—Bryce (I) decisioned Linder; 2:35. 145 Pounds—Hawkins (C) decisioned Bassham; 1:28. 155 Pounds—Goings sioned Keeler; 2:48. 165 Pounds—McDaniel sioned Kaufman; 5:22. 175 Pounds—Hyde (I) decisioned | Horsting; 4 minutes. Heavyweight—Haak (I) decisioned Sickish; 3:09.
VINES MAKES IT EIGHT VICTORIES TO FIVE
Times Special MIAMI BEACH, Fla. Feb. 1— Ellsworth Vines made it eight victories against five for his barnstorming tennis partner, Fred Perry, when he defeated the Englishman, 5-7, 7-5, 6-4 yesterday. A crowd of 2000 saw Perry make a spectacular rally which proved futile.
(I) threw
(I) deci-
(C) deci-
(I) deci-
YOU HAD A NECK AS LONG AS THIS FELLOW AND HAD
* | | |
| Orr Tue Backsoarp
place |
Sherrill “been voted a niche in the Coopers- | town Hall of Fame. , | of sports boycotts—baseball fans of
Indiana Wrestlers
ignore the Indians home games be-
‘bench show starting ‘Square Garden on Feb. 10. . . . The
By JOHN W.
| Washington’s
| The Latter’s
THOMPSON
City Champs Uphold Local Banners By Winning From Ben Davis On
New Floor.
LAINVILLE High School's fighting basketball team kept the Hoosier net linens from being soiled by bringing the Wabash Valley tournament title back to
Indiana. The Plainville boys took
the defending champions,
Oblong, lll, into camp in the semifinals, 34-23 and then won from Wiley of Terre Haute in the final contest,
30-22. which will bear watching. » un n
Thereby comes from the valley a dark horse
=" = ”
With high school tourneys scattered all over the state, the games played Saturday night, most of them finals, must have created a
new high in sound waves caused by loyal rooters.
most of them, were tight ones.
The final games,
In the Gibson County meet at Oakland City, Owensville bested the home town boys from Oakland, 18-17 in the last game. It was Sheridan, 25 and Westfield, 24 (overtime) in the Hamilton County
tourney at Sheridan.
Hoagland did better than seme of the others and won from New Haven, 25-21 in the finals of the Allen County meet at New Haven and Lynville had it positively easy in winning its game with Boonville, the Warrick County meet, but that meet’s not over. At St. Paul the final game of the Decatur County tourney between Jackson and Sandusky ended 18-17 in favor of the former. But Marengo won the final in the Elind Tourney at Marengo, from
Bird's Eye, 37-12. a blind tourney!
» = =
And what chance, I ask vou, has a Bird's Eye in
» ” o
ECH’S up-and-down basketball team had an off week-end along with Shortridge, losing to Muncie Saturday night, 42-19. It was a case of Tech's offense being off and Muncie’s defense being on. Tech's lack of height and Muncie’s possession of it, helped the Bearcats immensely and they cashed in on under the basket shots all evening. Tech missed many which should have been good. Their passing was, for the most part, wild and badly handled. The score at the half was 20-5, Muncie and the Bearcats led, 20-8 at the end of the third quarter. Coach Bayne Freeman's boys turned on steam during the last period, but it was too late. Hall, Muncie’s flashy forward, led his team's scoring with four field goals and three free throws, but Myers, one of the best guards seen around these parts was right on Hall's heels, with five field goals. Shortridge locked bright at the start of its game with Crawfordsville in the Blue Devils’ gym Saturday night, but lacked one point of coming through in the final pinch, losing 25-24. The local boys’ big trouble was inability to connect from the floor. Shortridge led, 9-6 at the first quarter, but the Athenians came back
to lead, 16-13 at the half.
The Blue Devils’ defense, led by Jack Dawson and Emery Schlake, held the Crawfordsville team to two points during the last quarter,
but that was one too many. » = =
= = Ld
ANUAL dropped its game with Plainfield Saturday night by a 51-21 margin. It was too much height that spelled defeat for the
Redskins.
Jake Weber the tall center on the Plainfield team, scored
27 points by dint of a couple of hands which could reach higher than
the other boys.
Wyant led the locals with three field goals. The one bright spot among the Big City schools was the fact Washington city champions let Ben Davis down in the latter's new
gym, 22-16.
It was an up-hili battle, however, for the Continentals. Carter and Laerkamp hopped into the fray at the beginning of the game and aided the Washington five to a 6-3 lead as.the first quarter ended. The Giants came back strong during the second period and were
ahead as the half ended, 11-7.
Carter and Miller instigated a Continental rally after the inter-
mission and brought the score up
to 16-14 at the end of the third
quarter, however, with Ben Davis still ahead. After Carter had been put out of the game because of some words he had with the referee, Miller and Laerkamp took the thing to heart and dropped in enough points to win the game. It looks like the city tournament picked the right guys to be
champions.
Table Tennis Ranks 10th In National Popularity
By United Press
NEW YORK, Feb. 1. —Putting the sport shots here and there. | tennis statisticians say there are now more than 3,000,000 players of the . . . They claim that the sport now ranks . . . Jimmy Wilde who used to boss
game in the United States. tenth in the nation in this respect.
Table
the flyweights, is reported as having now passed the 190-pound mark.
Dave Levin, boy” of the wrestling rings, and a former title claimant, is recovering slowly from a blood stream infection. . . . He has had several blood transfusions. . . . Harness horse racing is enjoying a boom in Ohio. . » + Two old-time harness horse fixtures, the Merchants and Manufacturers’ Stake, and the Chamber of Commerce Stake, have been revived for this season in Toledo. Ohio's Buckeye conference basketball championship race has been knocked haywire by the floods. . ." Many games postponed because of lack of transportation facilities. . . . New York baseball writers are hollering because John McGraw hasn't
. . Speaking
Joe Vosmik's neighborhood in Cleveland are urging everybody to
| cause of the deal which sent Joe to the St. Louis Browns. . . . Sports-writer free-loaders who have had to take in beefsteak dinners three Monday nights running, will be fed again tomorrow. . . . This time it's a banquet at New
| York Athletic Club for Gar David-
son, popular Army football coach. ... A record entry of 3114 dogs has been made for the Westminster Kennel Club’s 61st annual all-breed in Madison
indoor track and field season which finally got off to a real start at Boston on Saturday, will swing along this week with the Millrose fixture at the Garden here. . , . Glenn Cunningham, who set a new record at 4:119 in the Curley mile at Boston, heads the list of star entries which includes three Olympic champions, John Woodruff, Negro Pitt sophomore, winner of the Olympic 800meter; Earl Meadows, handsome Californian, who won the pole vault at Berlin, and Cornelius Johnson, limber-limbed Negro from Los Angeles, who took the high jump title, . .
LEAN TO LEFT Times Special NEW YORK, Feb. 1.—Five of the nine outfielders on the Brooklyn Dodgers’ roster throw lefthanded, and eight hit that way.
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Coulson Wins Ohio Table Tennis Title
Times Special COLUMBUS, O. Feb. 1-—Earl Coulson, 18, of Indianapolis, won the Ohio Open table tennis championship last night. He defeated Calvin Fuhrman, Hamilton, O., three to two. The score was 25-23, 19-21, 21-13. Two hundred and ten players from nine states participated in the tournament. Goulson beat Ned Steele, Huntington, Ind. three games to two in the semifinals, while Fuhrman defeated Merle Arens, Dayton, O., three to one. Mrs. Clara Harrison, Cleveland, O., wen the women’s singles championship by defeating Mrs. Mary Mason, Toledo, O. Al Findlay and Ernest Walker, both of Cleveland, won the men’s doubles title. Mrs. Mason paired with Merle Arens to win the mixed doubles title.
Tony Marino Dies After Losing Bout
By United Press NEW YORK, Feb. 1.—Tony Marino, 25, bantamweight fighter who collapsed Saturday night after losing an eight-round decision to Indian Quintana of Panama died today of a cerebral concussion without regaining consciousness. Marino, formerly of Pittsburgh, was knocked down several times by the Panama boxer in their bout at the Ridgewood Grove Boxing Club, Queens. He collapsed while seated in his corner after the last round.
TEXANS TO PLAY 161 Times Special TULSA, Okla, Feb. 1.—A 1037 schedule of 161 games, opening April 14 and closing Sept. 12, has been adopted by the Texas League.
Last year's schedule included 154 games.
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Gould * Takes | Match Offer Of $500,000
Jacobs Says He Knows Noth- | ing of Venture, Doesn’t See | How Boys Can Meet.
|
i
By HENRY SUPER United Press Staff Correspondent CHICAGO, Feb. 1.—The odds today seemed definitely against a Jimmy Braddock-Joe Louis heavyweight title fight at Soldiers’ Field in June. Sheldon Clark, vice president of the Sinclair Oil Co., who was a copromoter with Tex Rickard in the second Dempsey-Tunney fight here, wants to get a “big fight” for Chi- | cago this summer. | He and several other millionaire Chicago sportsmen are working with the Illinois Boxing Commission and Mayor Edward Kelly's Centennial Jubilee Committee to feature a heavyweight title scrap as part of | the celebration. | Joe Gould, Braddock's manager, an{nounced he had accepted a guaran- | tee of $500,000, with the privilege of | 50 per cent of the net gate which is expected to gross $2,000,000. The proposition was made by Clark who wants to promote such a fight in co{operation with Mike Jacobs of New | York's 20th Century Club. Jacobs in Dark But Jacobs, who has Louis under contract through 1940 and who leased Max Schmeling to Madison Square Garden for a title fight June 3, in New York, claimed he knew nothing of the venture. He said, however, that Clark wanted to talk to him today. “All I know,” Mike explained, “is that I came out here yesterday to close for a Feb. 17 fight at Kansas City between Louis and Natie Brown. I wouldn't want to do anything to prevent Joe from getting a chance at the title but Braddock already is signed to fight Schmeling in June. “Max owes me $31,000 which I advanced him on his last trip over here. I have a 50 per cent interest in the Schmeling-Braddock fight. If I let Joe fight Braddock here and if he wins, he won't be champion as far as the New York Commission is concerned because they named Schmeling the number one | challenger. Must Be Rosy Offer
“They'd have to make a very rosy offer to put such a fight over.” Jacobs said Louis is in Detroit and knew nothing of the title negotiations. The Illinois Boxing Commission, it was believed, would sanction such a match regardless of what the New York Commission did. Gould, in accepting the offer, claimed the fight would draw | $2,000,000 here. The Schmeling fight, ihe said, “wouldn’t draw peanut | money” because of an anti-Nazi | boycott. According to James J. Johnston, | Madison Square Garden promoter, { the whole idea is a “pipe dream.” “We have an ironclad contract , binding Braddock to make his first | defense for us,” Johnston said in | New York. “Gould has been trying to break that contract ever since Jimmy won the title—but he can't do it.” If Braddock did contract to defend his title for an organization other than the Garden, it was believed Johnston could prevent the match via the courts.
Stonehouse Signed By Kokomo Golfers
Times Special KOKOMO, Ind. Feb. | Stonehouse, former pro at Coffin {links in Indianapolis, has been signed as golf pro at the Kokomo Country Club for 1937, officials have announced. He succeeds Lou Bola. Stonehouse has been pro at the Forest Park course in Noblesville for the last two years. Previous to that he was in Indianapolis.
—
Hank Marino Wins Bowling Series
By United Press MILWAUKEE, Feb. 1 —Hank Marino held the American Match Bowling Championship today after
his i Nag eent of Joe Miller, Buffalo.
1.—Ralph
In the final block of 10 games played last night Marion collected a | total of 2376 pins for a 237.6 aver- | age to retain the title he won last year. The champion did not out- | class his opponent, as Miller roiled a 231.5 average and won six of the games while one was tied. The championship match was played in four blocks of 30 games each. Marino piled up a big lead in the opening quarter of games played at Buffalo. The second and third blocks were played in Cleveland and Detroit while the last we Yolied Jere on Marino's own VS. ilier won and [Milvoulee es he Oleveisny Miller's margin here was only one pin. He score rino’ pin. d 6669 to Marino's Marino won 63, lost 5 four of the 120 games, 508 hey total was 571.26 to Miller's 550.40 One point was awarded for each
game and one for each i hy 50 pins up-
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As his manager and that of Joe Louis, to say nothing of Chicago sportsmen, New York million-
heavyweight maelstrom, battled like no two fighters ever fought, Jimmy Braddock stayed at home and
Sans ae
on the face of drawn into the
read stories to his children. Judging from the look
little Rosemarie Braddock, age 3,
who sits on Daddy's knee, the tale must be a thriller. Howard, age 5, on the left and Jay, age 6, seem to be enjoying it, too.
total in the Class A division of the
Bowes Quintet Champions Of Women’s
Tenpin Meet
By BERNARD HARMON Bowes Seal Fast is 1937 champion in feminine bowling circles, its top
annual tournament of the Indian-
apolis Women's Bowling Association gaining it the laurels.
the quintet Saturday night posted games of 850, 780 and 839 for a 2469. Marott Shoe Store, featuring Damsel Baxter's 551, finished in second | place, Coca Cola was third with | 2428 and Sunshine Cleaners, last | year's champions, were fourth with | 2378. | Coca Cola No. 3 nabbed the Class | B team championship with an 1850 total, I. W. B. A. No. 10 was second witha 1819, I. W. B. A. No. 9, third with a 1798, Beam’'s Pennsylvania Alleys, fourth, with 1707 and Gray, Gribben and Gray, fifth, with 1687. In the Class C team events which were completed over the previous week-end, I. W. B. A. No. 2 was crowned champions of that division. Josephine Ostheimer and Julia Lang combined totals of 565 and 541 for a 1106 total that was good for Class A doubles championship. Blanche Meyer and Mabel Fisher were second with 1030 and Annetta Crane and Marie Miller, third, with 1027. Gladys Rudbeck and Margaret Thiele are Class B doubles champions, their totals of 457 and 490 gaining them a 947 total and the honors. Helen Horning and Christine Urbancic with 946 were second and Violet Badders and ITelen Clark, third, with 452.
Helen Fehr Singles Champ
Games of 181, 190 and 207 gained Helen Fehr the Class A singles crown. The 578 series gave her a decided edge over Bertha Toumey, who was second with 553. Blanche Meyer took third on a 541. Muriel Hayes totaled 553 in winning first place in the Class C singles, Lillian Stevens was second with 495 and Christine Urbancic, third, with 43817. Mrs. Wiesman’s 1602 for the nine games gave rher first place in Class A all-events. while Mrs. Hayes' 1430 was good for the top spot in Class B. The event, which was held at the Pennsylvania Alleys, drew an entry of 60 teams, 47 doubles participants and 84 individual event entrants. It opened Jan, 23 and was completed last night. Two hundred and sixty-seven five-man quintets are to take part in the annual men’s city tourna-
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ment, which is scheduled to open at the Pennsylvania Alleys Satuday. Twenty of the quintets are listed as Class A aggregations, 112 are to vie for Class B honors and 135 are entered in the Class C division. The tourney is scheduled for five week-ends. Team events are scheduled to occupy the first two Saturdays and Sundays, with the minor events carded on following week-ends. The singles and doubles divisions also drew big entries, 56 dubles teams and 142 individuals being entered in Class A, 146 doubles and 201 singles in Class B and 133 doubles and 181 singles in Class C. Schedules for the event are to be available later in the week. BOWLINGRAMS: Jack Hunt broke his string of fancy totals when he tossed that 144 in the Beam Recreation. Should have done that earlier in the week and someone might have accepted his match game challenge. . . . Bill Greener did pretty well in the Insurance loop—a poor finish ruined a nice series. . . . The Cathedral League is losing one of its most popular members. Ray Dunn, a veteran of the pin lanes, is soon to take up new duties in Detroit. . . . Todd Wilbur collected another 600 series in the E. C. Atkins—getting to be a habit. Reed McGuire, a member of the Eli Lilly Ladies’ League, “cleaned” the 6-7-10 split in last Wednesday's session. Nice shot for anyone. . . . Joe White threatened Paul Sylvester’s supremacy in the Holy Cross League, but Paul's 242 final was too much for Joe to overcome. . . . Barney Galbreath continued his 600 shooting in the Pritchett Recreation. A slow start halted chances for his season's best. . . . Jaqua took the prize tumble of the week After opening with 212 and 229 in the Link Belt, he turned in a 124 windup, .
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Huerta, Buckler In Fast Workouts
Henry Huerta, Mexican featherweight, and Jimmy Buckler, Louisville, Ky., continued fast workouts today in preparation for their 10round bout ‘Wednesday night in Tomlinson Hall. Five bouts for a program of 40 rounds are carded for Wednesday night. The first bout gets under way at 8:30 p. m.
CUBS LAST TO GO OUT
By NEA Service CHICAGO, Feb. 1.—The Chicago Cubs will be the last major league team to swing into a spring exhibition series this year. Charley
Grimm's boys do not get under way |
until March 26, while the New York Giants start cashing in on paying shows in southern cities as early as Feb. 24.
ing in the Real Silk Mixed. They made the Fighting Irish look tome. . . . Johnson gave the United Taxi a 269 midale game in the Intermediate, but he failed to click in his other efforts. . . . The Printcraft boys are evidently warming up for their annual Tri-State tourney. They turned in some heavy totals in last week's session. . Pete Ernst led his Dutch Masters to a dandy 3001, Pete has his boys aiming at the Class B championship of the city tourney. ... The Washington League failed to produce a 600 series last week. Something wrong, boys? .. . Bowlers are doing their bit for flood refugees. Has your league joined the movement?
|
Little Beats His Teacher To Win Open
Neil Christian Falls Before Lawson’s Par-Cracking Drives and Putts.
By United Press SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 1.—Law= son Little, who retired undefeated as the amateur golfing king only to run into a series of disheartening
defeats as a professional, found a way finally to beat his fellow pros and as a result was $1000 richer today. Little won the San Francisco Na= tional Match Play Open Champione ship on the Ingleside Links yester= day by defeating a former teacher, Neil Christian of Yakima, on the 20th hole of a scheduled 18-hole match. To reach the final and nose out Christian, Little had to march through one of the strongest pro fields ever assembled for this ane nual tournament. After qualifying in seventh posi« tion in the tourney, pudgy Lawson smacked a 5-and-4 defeat on Ore ville White of Chicago, took a 3-and-2 verdict over Jimmy Hines of Long Island, and in his best performance trimmed Horton Smith of Chicago, 5 and 4. In every one of those matches the former Stanford student was well under par.
Continues Sub-Par
He continued his par-cracking performance on the first nine against Christian, who entered the final through victories over Paul Runyan, Leonard Dodson and Henry Picard. After the 15th hole Little was a dormie four and the gallery of 3000 was ready to acclaim him winner. But the favorite cracked for one of the few times in his match-play career and on four straight holes he took three putts. They were even at the 18th and played two extra holes before Little won with a birdie, Little took the major slice of the $5000 prize money with a $1000 check. Christian received $500 as runner-up; Smith and Picard were awarded $250 as semifinalists.
BURKE, HILTON WIN BENEFIT GOLF GAME
Times Special BELLEAIR HEIGHTS, Fla. Feb. 1—Billy Burke, former national open champ, and Vincent K. Hilton, Dayton, O., amateur, defeated Gene Sarazen and Douglas W. Hill, 2 up, in a Red Cross exhibition golf match yesterday. Scores for the round were Burke, 75; Hilton, 74; Sarazen, 77, and Hill, 78.
Smith’s Field Goal Wins for Green Bay
Times Special LOS ANGELES, Feb. 1.—Ernie Smith's 35-yard field goal in the final 30 seconds of play gave the Green Bay Packers a 17 to 14 victory over the Chicago Bears, Na-~ tional League rivals, yesterday. The game was a playoff of the the 20-20 tie between the teams last week.
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