Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 July 1938 — Page 17
“ FRIDAY, JULY 1, 1938
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
PAGE 1T
- BAER BOUT OF F, LOUIS Not TO DEFEND TITLE THIS YEAR
Meeting at Wimbledon Tomorrow ow fot English Title Recalls Time When Mrs. Moody Walked Off Court in
Match at
Forest Hills.
By
JOE WILLIAMS
Times Special Writer
NEW YORK, July don’'s historic center court Helens—Moody and Jacobs and Gertrude Lawrence.
1.—It will be the two Helens again on Wimbletomorrow. They've met more times than Noel Coward | Not to mention Hitler and Mussolini.
It seems it is always the two
Helen Moody usually wins; indeed, she has been beaten only once
against Helen who follow tennis closely will remember the details vividly. It was the most stunning default in the history of tennis. They were playing in of the American championship Forest Hills. Miss Jacobs took first set 8-6 was leading 3-0 in Mrs. Moody, without the slightest warning, walked calmly to the umpire chair and announced he! withdrawal Miss Jacobs had been at her best all week and the concrete circular | stands were packed with forty-love addicts gathered to see a rousing zlam bang battle between two women whose careers in athletics had run along strangely parallel lines,
in 11 Those of
matches vou
at the
the third when
S
Parallel Career
They both had been born in Suburban San Francisco; they had | both attended the same university; they had both shown an early aptitude for tennis; they had both | won national and internacional championships. . . . and the gossip over the tea cups in the lounges was that they were not on enthusiastically friendly terms. Anyway, it was an interesting, engaging situation. No other neighborhood rivalry achieved such national, even worldwide dimensions. Those two girls, born within a feeble stone's toss of each other, travelled from coast to Coast and crossed the Atlantic many times to match shots, was in an atmosphere charged with a certain, subtle, restrained bitterness. Miss Jacobs has repeatedly denied the existence of any personal feelings: I don’t recall that Mrs. Moody ever elected to dignify the general suspicion with comment of any.sort. But once she drew Miss Jacobs in a match she invariably went to work on her in a very stern and businesslike manner. as if the task at hand was a delight. She Called It a Day the afternoon of the epic Mrs, had dropped even so much as a single set to the little neighborhood girl who had made so bold as to challenge her supremacy on the courts. And when Mrs. Moody came back that afternoon and took the second set 1t was pretty generally felt she would go on to win in spite of the brilliant character of Miss unusual play But this feeling began to waver when Miss Jacobs took an early lead in the third and final set, and a few seconds later it took on a note of sheer amazement and acute bewilderment when, with the score 3-0 against her, Mrs. Moody stopped abruptly and walked off the court. Perhaps the most amazed person in the place was Miss Jacobs. I aw see her now rushing up to Moody's side and pleading with her
Up to
default Moody never
not to quit, as if she sensed the pub- |
than her celeIt was one of the
lic reaction more brated opponent. most dramatic Mrs, Moody shook her head, leaned wearily against the umpire's stand and said, “My legs are too weak, I can't go on.”
Didn't Shake Hands
To repeat, this was the first time she had ever lost even a set to Miss Jacobs and by now it was to everybody she was going to lose something more than a set; she was going to be beaten for the first time bv her little neighborhood rival I remember at that time we all thought Mrs. Moody looked the part of a poor sport. And as a matter of fact, in one respect, I still think she did. It came out later, of course she was suffering from a bad back and the suffering was so prolonged she was forced to remain out competitive tennis for some time. What I couldn't Mrs. Moody at vet, is why she shake hands, just a formal gesture, with the kid she had beaten so often and who now was on the threshold of her greatest moment in tennis, Dempsey Was Different
£ Ol
didn’t Aas
pause to
The Jacobs gal coming to her. It was bad enough that on the best dav she ever had in tennis, her triumph had to he blighted by a default; it was something close to a personal affront that she was publicly ignored 1 have made similar comment before and people have written in to say, in effect, that when vou are in great pain, you don't think clearlv, even your natural instincts be- | come atrophied, your one thought is | of surcease and of course this could be so.
at
But I recall thinking at the time |
of Dempsey the night Tunney had speared him blind with a left over in Philadelphia and when the
fight was over and the champion- | the Oid |
hands, eves closed, his
ship had changed Man Mauler, both face bulging with knots, his nose and mouth bleeding. nudged one of his handlers and said “Lead me out of the ring. I want with him.”
te shake hands
Jacobs,
club |
in sports had ever |
and always it |
Jacobs’ |
Mrs. |
moments in tennis. |
evident
understand about | the time and can't
least had that |
hand |
there in the middle |
»
Budge Again T akes Title!”
Bunny Austin Easy Victim at; Wimbledon.
the finals |
lost the second 3-6 and |
WIMBLEDON, England, July (U. P.).—J. land, Cal, | player, se for the second consecutive time | today, defeating 32-year-old Henry | Wilfred (Bunny) Austin of England, '6-1, 6-0, 6-3, in a one-sided final
| match.
the world's No. 1
tennis | won the All-England singles |
*
| | | | |
1 i Donald Budge of Oak- |
|
|
ce] Before a crowd of 20,000, including |
|
| Queen Mary and the Duke and Duchess of Kent, Budge gave Austin {one of the most severe lacings ever
and that time she defaulted. a
we
seen in a Wimbledon final. By win- |
{ning in straight sets today, | gangling California redhead went [through the entire tournament without losing a set—the first time any man had performed this feat. Austin never had a chance in tie | last major match of his brilliant career. He said he is going to re- | tire now and quit big-time tennis. Budge, ruler of every major court
the |
|
| |
| in the world, was the first American !
since Big Bill Tilden to win two in a row at Wimbledon. Tilden scored a “double” in 1921-22, Austin virtually was swept the courts in the opening sets. score 3-2 in his favor, down slightly as it began to Budge was leading when the match was delayed almost half an hour. When they resumed play, Budge again stepped up the attack and scored the most one-sided victory in all his matches in the tournament, The least number of games he had | lost in six matches prior to today was seven. And during the entire series he lost only 48. Austin, who never has won his own country’s title, even though this was his second Wimbledon final, was so pitiful at times that even | British fans in the stands groaned | at his attempts to make a match of Ft Budge, on the other hand, was never so superb at Wimbledon. After the match, Budge was called to the roval box. He shook hands with Queen Mary and the and Duchess of Rent.
from | two |
Yale Netter Scores
Upset at Montclair
MONTCLAIR, N. J, July 1 (U.P). —Howard V. Stephens Jr. of Yale was strongly favored to win the
championship today after his upset | victory of yesterday over Julius | | Heldman of the University of Cali- | | fornia at Los Angeles. Stephens, an unseeded entrant, | turned back the California left- | hander, 6-2. 6-2, In round match at the Montclair Ath- | letic Club. Heldman was former na- | | tional junior titieholder and top-! | seeded favorite.
. ~ Sports Quiz QUESTIONS ANSWERED Have vou a sports question vou want answered® Write vour aunestion clearly. sign vour name and address and mail your query te Sports Service Bureau, The Indianapolis Times, 1013 13th St. Washington, D. C.. inclosing a 3-cent postage stamp. A personal reply will come to vou. Some of the mast interesting questions and answers will he printed here dailv. Don't telephone vour questions, write as directed.
Q—Please describe the situation in the last part of the final game of the 1926 World Series, in
Then in the third, with the | Budge slowed | rain. |
i nesa of Holy
Duke |
GOLFING
HE ninth annual American Legion Golf Tournament will be held
Wednesday, July
Turnesa Beaten In College Play
LOUISVILLE. Kv., -—Three sophomores and a senior matched strokes in the semifinal round of the 41st annual Inteicollegiate Golf championships today Comedalist Lew Oehmig, University of Virginia, met Burt McDowell of Louisiana State in one 36-hole match, and Bobby Babbish, | University of Detroit, played Johnny ! Burke, Georgetown College star. The surprise of the tournament was the elimination of Willie TurCross, who shared medalist honors with Oehmig. The youngest of the seven golfing Turnesas from Elmsford, N. Y., was put out 3 and 2 by Babbish in yesterday’s quarterfinal. Today's matches were considered fairly even. While Babbish might
July 1 (U. P..
rate the favorite's role because he beat the subpar shooting Turnesa. |
Eastern Intercollegiate single tennis |
|
their fourth- |
he is meeting an opponent in Burke who scored a 12 and 10 quarterfinal victory over the weli-rated Stan Holditch of Georgia Tech. Some of the experts were picking | McDowell, who beat Michigan's Biil | Barclay 2 and 1 yesterday. They | | point out that the Louisiana starter | has been runnerup in four tourna-
13, at the Hillcrest Country Club. Legion members in Indiana are eligible.
the 40 and 8, Grande Voiture of Indisha, with the co-operation of Irving-
|
| ments in the last 10 months and is |
| ripe for a title. In Oehmig,
| tough foe. Oehmig stopped Louisi- |
| ana
State's “champion spoiler,” Spanish-born Henry Castillo, 3 and 1 yesterday.
'SEABISCUIT AWAITED
AT ARLINGTON PARK
CHICAGO. July biscuit, lington with 15 Charles cisco.
1 (U. P.).—Seaturf favorite, arrives at ArPark irom Boston today other horses owned by S.
A swollen tendon which kept him |
out of the $50,000 Massachusetts Handicap at Suffolk Downs Wednesday, was reported to be better todav
| and he may be able to start in the
which |
Tony Lazzeri of the New York Yan- |
kees, struck out with
loaded.
A—New York started the seventh |
| inning with Combs drawing a base on halls. Koenig sent him to second with a sacrifice bunt. Ruth was
the bases |
{ | | |
purposely passed and then Meusel
grounded second.
to Bell, forcing Ruth at Haines, the St. pitcher, had Gehrig in the hole but suddenly lost control of the ball, sending him to first and filling the | | bases, with two out. Haines stopped | ! pitching when Lazzeri walked to the | plate, and after consulting with Hornsby, left the box and Grover
| Alexander was summoned to relieve |
him. Lazzeri took a strike. For his | second strike he hit a solid drive to
and would have won the series for New York had it been safe, and on | the next swing he struck out.
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left field that was foul by a few feet |
Louis |
{ 1
i
$10,000 added Stars and Stripes | Handicap at Arlington Monday. He is scheduled to begin an intensive drill tomorrow to work the soreness out of his leg. Arlington Park officials said an announce-
ment would be made after the Board | : of Stewards witnesses the workout. !
PACES WOMEN GOLFERS
WASHINGTON, Ind, July 1 (U, P.) —Scoring honors in the invitational golf tournament here today were held by Miss Ermaguarde Grabbe of Terre Haute. with a 91 gross, and Mrs. Jack Klemeyer of Vincennes, who took a net 73. Approximately 40 women golfers from Vincennes, Bedford, Terre Haute, Bloomington and Washington par-
| ticipated.
| | | | | | |
|
| however, he faces a
Howard of San Fran-
All American
ton Post Post 133. The post
38 and Bruce P. Robison
whose four-man team
The tournament is sponsored by |
| turns in the low gross score will win
the 40 and 8 Grande Voiture Cup.
Ihe cup has been won by the Harry | Ray
v Post of Richmond, George Hockett Post of Anderson and last year by the Lafayette Post 11. The cup will become the permanent possession of the post whose team is the first three-time winner. Another trophy will be awarded the post whose four-man team tallies the low net score. Washington Post 121 won it last year.
The player having low gross indi- | vidual score will receive a diamond | i Bar-B-Cue Boosters of Aurora, Ill,
set Legion pin from the Bruce P. Robison Post and the low net individual will receive a similar pin from the Irvington Post. A prize
ing the most pars. Entry blanks may be obtained from local post adjutants, Voiture Locale Correspondents or by writing Ray Woods, 119 E. Ohio St.
» n »
T Pleasant Run yesterday aft-
ernoon in the ladies invitation- | al golf tournament, Miss Elizabeth | Dunn won gross honors by firing an |
land Sunday
| Stadium will be awarded to the player card- |
| year.
| pitcher, registration chairman, :
Ta |
| | | | |
Pair May Meet on Coast in 39
Champ Also Calls Off Trip to Europe So He Can Supervise Building of Home for His Mother.
CHICAGO, July 1 (U.P.).—Heavyweight Champion Joe Louis will not
3 | meet Max Baer in September and wiil do no more fighting this year with i | the exception of a few possible exhibitions, his comanager, Julian Black, i i said today.
“+f >
“Joe has been working hard and needs a rest,” Black said.
“He has
defended his title four times since<
he won it from Braddock a year ago.”
in the event Baer is beaten, Gun-
nar Barlund of Finland probably
Black said he had talked to Mike | would be the next man in line for
Jacobs, New York promoter, who |
} ; | ices,
| Louis needs a rest. | Baer will remain as No. 1 challen- | ger, Black said, unless he is defeated before 1939. He added that
Interest Wide ~ InRiver Swim
| Paddlers From Terre Haute
Softball Notes
Markets defeated Llovd's Laundry of Franklin, 5 to 0, in a Belmont State League game at Franklin. Hal Mahaney pitched onehit ball for Shaw's. Bus Oyler hit a home run with one on in the fifth.
Shaw's
The Knights of Columbus Original
will play Shaw's Market tomorrow nights at Belmont in two National Softball League games. The Aurora team has won 18 games and lost two this Tony Goblet, famed for “submarine dip ball,” is their star The first five men have a batting average of .350. Sha'7’s will depened on Cannonball Dosch or Logan Kinnett to twirl tomorrow night and Hal (Windmill) Mahaney Sunday night. The Indiana Avenue Market team will play the Keystone Reds in the |
82. Second place was won by Mrs. | preliminary game tomorrow night | Marie Flood with a 95. In the net|and the Goldsmith Secos will clash |
| division, Mrs. Vera Crane was first with 98-20—78, and Mrs. Ruth Lykins second with 98-12—86. n ”
At Hillcrest yesterday afternoon | Miss Harriett Randall, women’s City
”
with the Coca Cola team from | | Greencastle in the Sunday night | | preliminary. Last night at Belmont Stadium Ajax Beers defeated Indiana Avenue Market, 3 to 1. Marott’'s de-
his |
at Capitol Ave. and Kansas St. at 1 p. m. For games call Dr. or write J. M. Mudd, 1245 S. Senate Ave.
Em-Roe Leagues
| Last | Stadium:
night's scores at Stout
2
iana
4:
| England's Market, Garage,
Tipton Highway | State Highway, 7.
| Tonight's Industrial League sched- | ule at Stout Stadium:
| Fletcher Trust International vester at 7 o'clock. Indiana State Employment | Adams at 8 o'clock. Indianapolis Blue Print vs. Bauer at 9 o'clock
Results in the Junior League: Howard Street Juniors,
Allied Florists, 9; Ind
VS. D. Kothe-Wells- |
vs, J.
Art's Service, 5, 4, 2
Haughville Ramblers, Morris Street 2.
Juniors,
Howard Street Juniors, 8; Central Chris- |
tian Juniors
| day or Monday see Everett Babb al | the Em-Roe Sporting Goods Co., or | call LI. 3446.
CHAMPS FACE HARVESTERS FT. WAYNE, Ind, July 1 (U. PJ). | —South Bend Bendix Brakes, state
| softball champions the last three
champion, and Bert Kingan defeat- | feated Banner Whitehill, 1-0, with | years, will oppose the Harvesters at
{ed Mrs. Dale Lentz and Roy Smith, | Logan Kinnett pitching a no- hit, | 1 eague Park tonight. pro, 1-up in a high and low ball | ho-run game
| match. Miss Randall shot an 84.
| Mrs. Lentz 87, Mr. Smith 74 and | Mr. Kingan 82.
The Hillcrest caddie team defeated the Country Club team, 10 to 3. at Hillcrest yesterday morning with Eppic pacing the losers with a 79.
Archery Tourney To Open Sunday Some of the best marksmen in the Middle West will gather at the! Gregg farm, 106th St. and N. Meridian, Sunday and Monday for the
12th annual championship tourna- | team will play at Rhodius Saturday |
ment of the Midwestern Archery Associntion. Approximately 200 bow | and arrow experts are expected.
Russell Hoogerhyde and Rennett | both of Chicago, will defend | their titles won last year in Milwau- |
Yanke,
kee. Robert H. Sturm, Indianapolis { Archery Club president. will be field captain and Miss Ruby East of Terre Haute will be Lady Paramount. The two-day program opens Sunday at 10 a. m. with the men shooting a York Round, the women a
National and Columbia Round and |
the juniors a Junior American Round.
Nationa! and In the evening
the archers will hold a banquet and |
| business meeting to select next | | year's officers and tournament site.
ee
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for Banners. An | error permitted the run. Mahaney | | pitched two-hit ball for Marotts. Tonight's schedule at Belmont: William H. Block Co. Van “amp
Hardware at 7:30 p. m Market, vs.
Richardson's 8:30 p. m
VS.
| The West side Merchants want a | game for July 4 at their diamond at Grande Park. Call BE. 3638 and ask for Slo. The Monte Carlos will tangle with the Mooresville Merchants on July 4 but want a game for Sunday. | Write O. H. Sweeney, 942 Maple St. | St. Georges Episcopal softball | at 3 p. m. and gt Spades Park Sun- | day at 2: 30 p. Al players meet '
Rhigns Club at |
Kraft, who | pitched the Kenosha, Wis. team to
| a national championship in 1936, | will pitch for the Brakes. N. Nahr-
wold will do the twirling for the |
Harvesters.
CAN'T ACCOMMODATE ALL The Cincinnati baseball club received 140,000 applications for served seat game, July 6, while its reserved seat capacity is only 20,000. " REDUCED PRICES
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And Louisville Entered.
Swimmers representing the Indianapolis and Hoosier Athletic Clubs, the Lakeside Club of Louisville, and paddlers from Huntington, Terre Haute and Lafayette have entered the annual River swim here July 4 starting at 10 a. m. The races, one for men and one for women, are sponsored by the Indianapolis Athletic Club and will be held over a designated course in White River. The men's race will be a 24 mile swim and the women’s race 1% mile. Competition in both divisions has been divided into free style, breaststroke and backstroke. Competition in both divisions has been divided into free style, breaststroke and backstroke. Randle Willis,
of starters:
Women’s Free Style—Mary Ryan, Ann Hardin and Helen Erhart, Lakeside Club of Louisville; June Fogle. Autieui Club and Elsie Bauer,
‘Women's Back Stroke—Vir nis Hunt, A. C., and Dorothy Nichoalds, H. Q. ‘Women's Breast Stroke —Elsa Efe Lakeside Club: Betty Clemons, A.C.
Hoosier
1
| Mary Hayes and Margaret Wilcox. H. A. C. | Entries in the men’s free style include |
Gerald Rudig. Murrav Hubley
Dick Lewis,
. '3 Terre Haute C.: Sonn u. graham, Lafayette, Ind.
Jim Custer,
| A. and | Breast
Men's Stroke—Ted Nicholas, T. A. C.: Raymond Badger. Huntington “'Y", and Lerov Edelson, Lhkeside Club. John Dillev and Philip Shutt, Huntington, are entered in back ition,
All contestants
start, Officials include Paul dan, referee; Ed Clemens, clerk of | the course; | Aspinall, inspectors; Mrs. | Willis and Bill Jordan, timers, and | Randle Willis, judge of the finish,
HURLS NO-HIT GAME JEFFERSONVILLE, Ind. July
| run softball game at the Play Square
terday.
; | has an option on the Bomber's serv- | a
| and then
in charge of en- | tries, announces the following field |
Indianapolis |
Max Peters, | ou Haines, Bob Walters of Huntington |
stroke compe-
will be examined | by City Hospital doctors before the Jor- |
Ward Fowler and Ed | Thelma |
1 | (U, P.).—Jim Raymond, former Jeff | | High School basketball star, became | the first player to pitch a no-hit, no- |
a crack at the title. knockout
Barlund scored over Baeér's brother,
and that Jacobs had agreed | Buddy, last March.
In the event Max Baer remains unbeaten until next year, it was understood he might meet Louis next
| spring at San Irancisco during the
World's Fair or at Los Angeles. Black also disclosed that Louis
{ had postponed indefinitely a pro= | posed vacation trip to Europe.
The champion and Mrs. Louis
were to have sailed from New York
next Wednesday. Louis was said to have postponed the trip so he could supervise construction of a new home for his mother, Mrs. Lilly Brooks, in Detroit. Louis was to leave today for Detroit where he will remain a week go to Black's summer home at Stevensville, Mich. He will remain there for nearly a month and then go to New York for the lightweight championship bout Aug. 10 between champion Lou Ambers and Henry Armstrong, featherweight and welterweight title holder. Since he won the world's tit'4 from Braddock here June 22, 1937, Louis has defended his crown against Tommy Farr of England, Nathan Mann of New Haven, Conn.; Harry Thomas of Eagle Bend, Minn,, and last week against Max Schmeling.
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