Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 August 1938 — Page 7
Tennis Coach Hints Suit in:
Kovacs Row
Young Star “Intimidated’ Into Disavowing His Aid, Hudson Says.
NEW YORK, Ate. 9 (U, P)= George Hudson, Berkeley, Cal, tennis coach, charged today that his star pupil and protege, 18-year-old Frankie Kovacs, was “playing ball” with the U. S. Lawn Tennis Association, : ; He threatened legal action against the Association for alleged intimidation declaring that he had spent years developing Kovacs into a top-flight player only to be deserted beca a “certain tennis official told him (Kovacs) that he would not be helped or supported by the association if he continued to accept coaching from me.” “I can understand Frankie's denial of me because to do otherwise would be suicidal as far as his tennis future is concerned,” Hudson said. this thing through, because it is about time amateur tennis was cleaned up, and I hope I may be the one to start the ball rolling.” Kovacs, playing in the Eastern Lawn Championships at Rye, N. Y., said that Hudson’s charges were ridiculous. “I don’t owe Hudson anything,” he said. “He didn’t give me one stroke. I took lessons from him— 20 of them—but only after my father had paid him in advance. Two years ago Hudson asked me to tell the public I had been coached by him as ‘it would benefit his reputation. I did. I am under no obligation to him; I won't back him up in anything, and I don’t ant anything further to do with Walter S. Pate of the Davis Cup . Committee on Management chairman, and Holcombe Ward, president of the U.'S. L. T. A,, denied Hudson’s charges.
Favorites Advance
In Local Tourney
Seeded players today began second round matches in men’s, junior’s and boy’s singles division in the City Parks Tennis Tournament at the . Fall Creek Courts. No upsets were recorded in ‘yesterday's contests. Matches which were rained out yesterday were rescheduled for today. First matches in women’s singles, men’s doubles, junior doubles and mixed doubles will begin tomorrow. Today’s schedule:
Men’s S:ngles
A. M.—Buddy McMurdo vs. Murray Dulberger; Woody Weiland vs. Riley Han-
soe P. M.—Vernon Roth vs. Frederick Mert; Hank Campbell vs, Gerald Sage; Andrew Gus vs, Linden Beaty; Dan Morse vs. Carl Shade. 5 P. M.—Dick Bastian vs. Robert Neidhamer; E R. Sunman vs. William Fulton; Ralph Brafford
William Guignne’: Adrian LaFollette v8. Edgar Baase; Fred Likely vs. Fred Richards; Warren Engelhardt vs. Art Brooks; Don Wagener vs.
Stanley Malless. Junior Singles
9 A. M.—Roger Lewis vs. Jack Nelan; Joe Kettery vs. Billy Guidone; Richard McGenna vs. Clyde Akard. 10:30 A. M.—Bill Gehriein, vs. Paul Harvey; Forest Risley vs. George Roth: Bob Monger vs. John Shirley; Fred Likely VS. Charles Wallace; Robert Young vs. Riley ancock. 12 Noon—Bob Parrett vs. Woody Wie-
land. 2 P. M.—James Kohl vs. Joe Blackwell; Lowell Renshaw vs. Paul McCreary; wil= liam Ogle vs. Boris Meditch; Lester Rosenthal vs. Alfred Dobrowitz, Boys’ Singles 12 Noon—Tom Messerlie vs. Don Olsen; Earl Odey vs. Blair Noland; Sirney Izak Xe Jon McColley; John Shirley vs. Roger ow! 3 Be 'M.—Joe Boleman vs. John McCord; Victor Cardarelli vs. Charles Tichenor: Roger Lewis vs. James Mitchell; David Scudder vs. William Krietzer. Yesterday’s results:
Men’s Singles 8. 0m, Hooker defeated Chalmers Webb, 6-3; Da Morse defeated Paul Mecpr eary, 6-1, bert Anderson defeated ‘Boris Meditch, 6-4, 6-2; Harrv Teegarden defeated Ted Meixner, 6-3, 6-4. Junior Singles Al Gisler defeated Roderick Morrison, 1 i James Kohl defeated Dick AnderJack Nelan defeated e 6-1, 6-1; Raymond yon. Spreckalson defeated John Ambler, 6-2; Woody Weiland defeated Robert Kettery defeated Clyde Akard d. 6-2, 12-10; Lowen Renshaw defeated Bernard Langenbacker, 3 6-3; Paul Harvey defeated Leo ich defeated ; John Shirley de-
feated g -2, 0-6, 6-2; Robert Young defonred ‘Fred Wolfe, 6-3, Boys’ Singles Ponald Owen defeated Robert Kulk, 7-5, 1. Ear
Odey defeated Aribert s %.3, 6- i Blair Nowland defeated idney Izaak
er wis de-
feated Jack Hen 6- 6-1; James Mitchel defeated William Fitzpatrick. 6-3, 6-3; William gi ger defeated Bill Pohiman, 6-0, Jigtor Cardarelli defeated James Mitchell, 6 6-0.
Hudlin Victor in Midwestern Play
Richard Hudlin, St. Louis city champion, defeated Robert Ryland, 6-2, 1-6, 6-2, in the outstanding match in the 14th annual Midwestern, Tennis Tournament which opened on the Douglas Park courts yesterday. Tommy Wasker, Elwood Downing, both members of the West Virginia State Teachers College team, are seeded first and second in the men’s singles, followed by Richard Cohen, Xavier University; Lloyd Scott and Ted Lawson, both from Prairie View, Tex.; Robert Ryland, cago; H. Zeigler, Indianapolis, d Wilbur Clark, Chicago.
KIPKE MAINTAINS LEAD IN GRID POLL
CHICAGO, Aug. 9 (U. P.).—Harry Kipke, late of Michigan, maintained his lead today in the poll to select a coaching staff for the college AllStars, who battle the Washington Redskins Aug. 31. Kipke had a total of 14,553,236 points to 13,658,166 for A. N. (Bo) McMillin of Indiana. Voting ended Saturday night and the last of the ballots will be counted by tonight.
EARLY BOWLING NOTES
The Industrial Bowling League will meet Thursday at 8 p. m. at ‘the Indiana bowling alleys. Representatives of teams interested in joining this loop ple please attend.
The Washington rion Bowling League will hold a meeting Friday night at 8 o'clock at the Illinois bowling alleys.
“But I am prepared to see |
"|Past state nines write O.
Lou Ambers
Golf News
LEASANT RUN and. South Grove will hold a team match at Pleasant Run Sunday with 25 comprising each team. Fred Gronauer, district champion and a member of Pleasant Run’s team, will be paired with Clayton Nichols of South Grove. Both are members of the Indianapolis public links team. Bob Phillips of Riverside and Walter Chapman of Coffin, the other two members of the public links team, will complete the foursome. Nichols is the only member of the quartet who has played in a national public links tournament. This year’s team is also one of the youngest teams ever to represent Indianapolis.
» » » PEEDWAY'’S club championships have simmered down to the semifinals with Don Rink scheduled to play Pete Ernst and Ray Rober{son matched against Max Blackburn. The matches will be played Sunday with the final 36-hole test the following week-end. As Speedway has never had a club championship before, this year’s winner will have the distinction of heing the first.
2 =» t
Tomorrow. at Meridian Hills the ladies are holding a caddy-member tournament. It will be a handicap affair and prizes will be awarded for low gross and low net.
A foursome. coraprived of Harold Cork of Indianapolis, Frank Champ, Roy Hili and Bob Shook of Terre
Haute won first in the pro-amateur | #
tournament at* Rae Park, Terre Haute, last week-end. They tied with a team headed by Ken Welty, Noblesville pro, with 68+ strokes, four under par for 18 holes. In the playoff Cork dropped a six-foot putt for a par three on the 22d hole to win the match.
Baseball
Ollie Schmoll pitched the Southport Red Birds to a 6-to-5 decision over the Tipton Club Sunday. Stull led the attack for the Red Birds with a home run, triple and a single. Southport will play at Crawfordsville_ next Sunday.
The East Side Cubs won from Fortville Sunday, 5 to 4. The Cubs, who have lost only one out-of-town game this season, have Aug. 14 and 28 open. State teams write Emerson Cox, 525 N. Keystone Ave. or call CH. 3325.
In the Big Six League last weekend Baird’s Service defeated Standard Nut Margarines, 12 to 9. Kroger KEMBA trounced L. S. Ayres, 12 to
» 12, in the first game and 6 to 2 in
the second game.
In the Capitol City League the Garfield A. C.’s scored a 7-to-1 victory over the U. H. Cardinals in the first game and in the nightcap GarBel evened the tally by winning, 3.
In the Municipal League Beach Grove shut out Beanblossom, 11 to 0, and 6 to 0, in a double-header.
. —— The South Eastern Greys want to book a game for Sunday with a state nine. Write Melvin Ollman, 3902 Prospect.
Bob Adler allowed the Falls City Hi-Bru nine only five hits while the
General Exterminators were touch- |
ing Robold for 10 when the Falls City team Jost their first game of the season, 4 to 2. Becker and Altop were outstanding for the Exterminators.
Dick Mills and Jiggs Seal bagged three hits each in leading the Sterling Beers in their 6-to-3 triumph over Kautsky’s at Lafayette Sunday in an Indiana-Ohio League game.
The Fall Creek Athletics, with Russell Williams striking out seven and allowing six hits in six innings, defeated the Hillsdale Landscape team, 7 to 6, and then lost fo Ft. Harrison’s Battery A, 19th Field Artillery team, 16 to 3, in five innings. Fall Creek had 10 errors counted againdt them in the abbreviated contest.
The East Side Merchants won their eighth straight victory by defeating Knightstown, 3 to 2. Sunday the Merchants play at Mooresville.
The Falls City Hi-Brus will practice at Riverside 2 tomorrow at 4 p. m. The Hi-Brus play Link Belt Ewart at Riverside 3 Saturday and Logansport at Logansport Sunday.
The Monte Carlo All-Stars defeated the South Side Cubs, 5 to 2
Sweeney, 942 Maple St.
10dds 3-to-1
Ambers Loses To Armstrong|
Henry - Is Heavy Favorite To Annex Third Crown Tomoprow Night. By LESLIE AVERY
United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Aug. 9.—The boys
who lay their money on the’ line to-
‘| day gave Lou Ambers only one
chance in three of remaining lightweight champion when Henry Armsirong surges out to meet him, fists flailing, tomorrow night at the Polo Grounds. They offered even money that Ambers wouldn't last the full 15 rounds. Those odds reflected a general belief that Armstrong would knock out Ambers and thus bécome the first fighting man in history to: wear three crowns simultaneously. This belief was also reflected at the box office, where it was indicated the total gate would be less than $80,000. Promoter Mike Jacobs insisted today that a “big,
| last-minute sale” would bring the
gate to more than $100,000, but he admitted that the advance sale was only about $30,000. Many smart boxing men—fellows directly connected with the beakbusting business—called the 3-to-1 odds the “juciest ever offered.” They were taking the short end of the betting, and liking it. Some even hocked rings and watches to grab the even money that Ambers would be knocked out. These men declared that no man under the middleweight division could belt out the rugged little Herkimer fighter, recalling that he took the Sunday punches of McLarnin, Canzoneri and Montanez without folding. Many inhabitants of Lammers’ Lane insisted that Ambers actually might knock out or stop Armstrong, who scored 35 knockouts in 38 bouts en route to the featherweight and welterweight titles. They emphasized that Jumping-Jack Lou is a “cutie” who never goes to town unless the title chips are down; that when he does cut loose, he is such a phantom no one can touch him. They credited him with the stamina to hold a whirlwind clip for 15 rounds, and with being clever enough to cut the California Negro to ribbons and thereby gain a technical knockout. Heavyweight Champion Joe Louis arrived from Chicago yesterday and watched Ambers complete his box}ing at Summit, N. J. Though he came East to talk about a September fight for himself, he quickly swung into the ballyhoo chorus and said: “That Ambers boy is awful fast. He's quick to see openings. He'll give Armstrong a tough fight, It ought to be nip and tuck.”
LOCAL TYPOS TAKE ON DETROIT TEAM
Times Special ST. LOUIS, Aug. 9.—The Indiandpolis Union Printers were scheduled to oppose Detroit in the Union Printers International Baseball Tournament here today. Indianapolis was defeated by St. Louis in the first game Sunday. Two defeats eliminate a team from championship competition. Teams representing New York, Baltimore, Cincinnati, Minneapolis and St. Paul won their first starts.
178 HOLES A CINCH TO HIM, CADDY SAYS
KANSAS CITY, Mo., Aug. 9 (U. P.) —Charles Richardson, 18, his feet blistered and his face and arms badly sunburned, insisted today that he could have played 180 holes of golf yesterday, if his caddie friends and the owner of the course that he was playing, hadn’t stopped him after 173 holes. “I had two hours until sundown,” said Richardson, a tall, lanky allround high school athlete. The youth undertook the golf marathon “on a dare” to show fellow caddies he could play more than 144 holes in one day. A large gallery began to follow him when it became apparent that he would exceed the 144 hole mark of J. Smith Ferebee, Chicago, who gained full hue to a Virginia Plantation for his ea The youth averaged 82 for each 18 holes and did not have a round above 90.
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And Watch; $100 Theft Is Reported. :
Three men _slu Robert Walkep, 588, St., after he had drinks each at &
police today. Mr. Walkep told police that after
he bought the drinks, the three offered to take him home. They had. driven only a few blocks when'they |
said. As he stepped ‘to the pavement, he said, one man hit him in the face and knocked him down, then, as he arose, another slugged him on ‘the head and knocked him unconscious. He said they took $25 and his watch. He was treated at City Hospital. Attorney Reports Theft
W. C. Bachelder, Indianapolis attorney, who gave his temporary address as the Indiana Democratic Club; 319 N. Pennsylvania St., told officers someone took his $14 glasses which he left on a table in the club lounge. Gahr Wysong, 3844 E. Michigan St., reported he had planned to go into the. business of, selling razor blades with a friend. ter he.gave the friend $100 to order the blades, Mr. Wysong said, the friend disappeared. Two small boys took $28.50 from a beauty shop. operator’s’ purse when she. went into the back room of her shop to hunt old newspapers or magazines they had asked her for, she told police. She is Clara Heidergott, 1512 N. Meridian St., Apt. 3, manager of a beauty shop at the same address.
ORGANIZER TO BRAVE JERSEY CITY IN TEST
JERSEY CITY, N. J, Aug. 9 (U. P.).—Carl N. Hubbel of Cleveland, Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen organizer, said today that rain had prevented his attempt to test the right of free speech in Jersey City without a permit last night and that he would try again tonight. He was undaunted by the charges of the Hudson County Committee for Labor Defense and Civil Rights that James Burkitt, foe of Mayor Frank Hague, had been placed in
water diet at the county penitentiary where he was sent for six months on charges of disorderly conduct resulting from his attempt to speak without a police permit.
KILLED BY FALLING LIMB HARTFORD CITY, Aug. 9 (U. P.).—Ralph Mefferd today was recovering from - injuries received, when a limb, being lowered from a tree by g rope, fell on him. A companion, ‘H: Olney Hincher, 32, was
driven, ouly‘a. few blocks wheditheg | 3
solitary confinement on a bread and |
on his own recognizance last night after he had surrenclered to the County Court to answer a charge of having been. an accessory to the
Ride Home Costs Victim $25 | pine
porters of Senator Barkley and Governor Chandler, who opposed each other in the Democratic primary Saturday for the U. S. Senatorial nomination. The shooting
{Ss She sliy afer Visions of he
POSSE HUNTS FOR - MURDERER OF TWO
§ pem———r— ‘SALLISAW, Okla., AE @. P). —Parmers in the Wild Horse Moun-
tain country joined peace officers toyday in & hunt for the assailant who
and. his cousin Anna May Johnson, |
fLowh: With, 8 Wagon load of pEOVIns, The" officers used bloodhaunds in an effort to trail the attacker who fired five times with a shotgun from ambush at the couple as they rode ‘along a country. road, six miles from here. Neighbors wondered if the shooting wasn’t the climax to a feud which Stanbridge vias believed to have carried on with “at least two enemies” over land rights.
PLANE RUSHING AID TO PRIEST IN ARCTIC
CHURCHILL, Man. Aug. 9 (U. P.)—The Rev. Fr. Paul Schulte, Manitoba's flying priest, will ‘take off today tq rush a doctor to Arctic Bay, 500 miles north of the Arctic Circle, where the local priest is critically ill. A radiogram from Arctic Bay,
said: “Father Cochard since nine days very sick temperature 105 pains
please help.” The message was sent by the Hudson Bay Co. and relayed from Nottingham Island. Father Schulte offered himself and his plane in the emergency. He uses it ordinarily fo visit isolated parishioners in the Far North. Arctic Bay is 1200 miles from Churchill.
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“DRAINAGE HERE
Suits Filed Against County As Crop Losses Result From Problem.
Serious farm land dreinage problems, some of which lead to law suits, have developed in nearly all sections of Marion County as result of the heavy summer; ‘rains, Surveyor Herbert Bloemker disclosed today. Sections. Vuirdest hit are west of Indianapolis near Clermont, the Sunshine Gardens district southwest of the city, Mars Hill section, and lands around Ben Davis. Petitions for new open ditches in the Clermont and Sunshine Gardens sections ‘were filed with Surveyor Bloemker today. Circulation of other petitions for new ditches around ‘Mars Hill and Ben Davis was started yesterday. Meanwhile, two suits against the County asking $13,000 . damages for crop ‘losses from flooded - ditches were used by County officials today as: mandates against the farmers
own ditches. -The suits, filed several weeks ago,
a boomerang to the farmers who filed them because there is an old | law on: the books. that requires farmers to take care of all open ditches bordering on their land,” | ‘Mr. Bloemker
notices ail along Buck Creek that all land owners must clean the ditch | by Oct. 1" he said. *
who filed ‘them to clean out their |
accused County officials of neglect
*I'nese sults necessarlly. will prove)
said. “I have driven stakes and posted
ADVICE:
ON'T let the bright. summer sun ; exact a toll from your eyes. Ask -Dr. Fahrbach to give you an examination | to make certain your eyes are not being | weakened by exposure to constant glare.
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