Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 August 1939 — Page 20
Mickey Walker to Appear 4
- Against Thomas on ~~ 31-Round Bill.
Big attraction of the boxing card at Sports Arena tonight will be the exhibition match between Mickey Walker, former middleweight and _ Welterweight champion, and Lou Thomas, an‘ Indianapolis heavy:weight, . Walkér now is scouring the Midwest looking for likely young heavy‘weight prospects, and the examiination consists of boxing with him. ‘He said he hopes to find one or two and train them into future title ‘contenders. * This will be a particularly dificult assignment for young Thomas, who has been out of the ring for 18 months due to a stomach ail:ment, but according to Kelse Mc‘Clure, matchmaker, the local boy ‘how is in fine physical condition. = The card calls for 31 rounds of boxing with the opening bout scheduled to begin at 8:30. In the ieight-round main go, Patsy Pat:ferson, « Somerset, Ky. will meet :yJoe Palmo, Cincinnati, They are :Seatherweights. : it The program: ylickey Walker, Ellsabet, N. Zounds.
J., vs. Lou Indianapolis; heavyw ights: dour
& ain Go - ~ Patsy Patterson, Somerset, Ky., vs. Joe iPaimo, Cincinnati; featherweights; eight
‘rounds. 3 ¥ Semi-Windu «. Biff Willoughby, Dallas, Tex., vs. Tommy Jakever, Indianapolis; featherweights; six
nds. x Preliminaries Wesley Kemp, Indianapolis, vs. Norman Hughes, Indianapolis; middleweights; five
ounds. “Al Sheridan, Indianapolis, ‘vs. Noble Bowers, Indianapolis; lightheavyweights;
four rounds Indianapolis, Paul
y Dycus vi Bunten, Coatsville; lightwe Shiss four
rounds.
AMATEURS
* CITY TOURNEY—SOFTBALL
.* Pepsi-Cola Boosters, Douglas Theater and Indiana Avenue All-Stars, favorites in the Softball Association of America’s City Tournament, will face tough foes in games scheduled at Belmont Stadium tonight. The Boosters meet De Golyer Printers at 7; Indianapolis Buddies furnish the opposition for Douglas at 9, and at 8 Schwitzer-Cummins will attempt to halt the Indiana Avenue boys; made up of last year’s County champions. - Four tourney games were played last night. Charlie Gunn turned in the feature performance of the evening when he limited Brightwood Merchants to one hit to give his Duke & Shaw team a 6-0 victory. Mallory U. E. W. won over Pearson’s, 7-0. Banner-Whitehill gained a 7-5 edge over Ringgold Reds and Ermet Products advanced through a 9-4 win over Indianapolis Bankers.
COUNTY TOURNEY Upsets are possible tonight as the Marion County softball tournament being staged by the Indianapolis Softball Association at Stout and Softball Stadiums reaches the quarterfinals. Remaining in action after three rounds of play are Indiana Avenue Market, defending champion of 1938, and WIRE, runnerup last year. ~The radio boys find themselves against tough opposition tonight at Softball field, facing the Gem Coal ten. The Coal team downed the Illinois Street Merchants, 6-5, last night. Indiana Avenue Market rode over E. C. Atkins, 10-2, but United Laundries have the stuff to provide an upset tonight. Stewart-Warner, a tourney favorite, turned back Blasengym Funeral Home, 4-2. 3 Kingans walloped the Burford Printers, 12-5, while Unemployment Compensation trounced Rockwood Buddies, 15-5. Rogers Jewelry came home an 8-0 victor over Standard Grocery.
TONIGHT’S SCHEDULE ~Soft Ball Stadium M.—WIRE vs. Gem Coal Company. M.—Indiana Avenue Market vs. United Laundries. —Stout Stadium— - 8 P. M.—Stewart-Warner vs. A. C's.
8 P. 9 P.
‘Kingan
9 P. M.—Rogers Jewelery vs. Unemployment Compensation.
SOFTBALL
.. Pive teams already have entered the Em-Roe Girls State Tourna- - ment, to be- held Aug. 15. They are the Golden Rules of Logans‘port, Delco Remy of Anderson, R. C. A. of Indianapolis; Hoosier A. C. -of Indianapolis and Richmond's Market of Indianapolis. Other teams from Connersville, Terre _ Haute, Washington, Seymour, Kckomo and Peru are expected to play in the tourney. Everett Babb has urged teams to mail their entries to him this week at 209 W. Washington St.
: BASEBALL Sterling Beers are seeking a game for Sunday. Call LI. 0273. The Lynhurst Cubs are in the market for a road game on Aug. 20. ‘Write William Niese, R. R. 3, Box
717, or call BE. 2357-M. °° .
Price and House will form Model Pairy’s battery for its game Sunday at Lebanon. - State teams are - asked to write Bill Rider, 856 Massachusetts Ave., for games,
Seymour Reds have open home gates on Aug. 27 and Sept. 3. Teams interested write Al Snyder, Seymour. : , Indianapolis Cardinals want a game for Sunday with a fast state club. Bedford and Bloomington notice. Write or call R. Day at the - Red Cab Co.
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gare; Witt, memorial unit, and Shirley
overtime to do it.
others as he does from playing.
In his 76th year and still a sturdy shooter, Mr. Hays believes that “golf allows old men to meet their old age gracefully,” and he takes keen delight in playing with other oldsters who do better than passable at the game.
Reading in a newspaper of W. H. Norton, the 88-year-old Indianapolis resident who fired a 79 over Pleasant Run earlier in the summer, Mr. Hays journeyed here yesterday for a special match. So they hepped over Pleasant Run's hills and dells for a full 18-hole round with Mr. Hays emerging victorious by a 2 up margin, At that, Mr. Norton wasn’t up to his usual game since arthritis had stiffened his arm and shoulder, making it difficult for him to get an easy, flowing swing. Mr. Mays plans to invite his. opponent up to Kalamazoo later on to play a special exhibition match, to demonstrate that golf has no age limit, and to give the thing an atmosphere of autumn ‘and spring, he also is to invite Miss Betty Hicks, youthful Long Beach, Cal, star now playing in the Women’s Western Golf Championship, to compéte with them. : All the golf courses in Kalamazoo were built largely through Mr. Hays’ promotional activities and with quite a bit of his money. He was an early believer that the classiffication of golf as a “rich man’s sport” was a detriment to its growth, and his interest has been devoted to improvement of public links. ~ “I have pretty definite ideas about golf greens,” he said, “and your
Here is Governor Townsend getting his ticket early for the Perry Stadium. It will be “Pack the Park Night,” sponsored by Eight, Legion fun and honor society, ‘between the Indianapolis Indians and the Minneapo Bringing the Governor his ticket are ticket sales for the American Legion Auxiliary memorial unit; Harold Brown, general chairman; C. E. Quan
TOM OCHI
OMEWHERE in what we know as the civilized world there may be someone with a greater, fonder belief in the values of golf than Charles B. Hays, Kalamazoo, Mich., but they are putting in a lot of
For Mr. Hays definitely is a golfer of the game who receives as much pleasure from building courses for
by
in celebration of
Rogers, Forty and Eight.
REE
the old school—a patriarch of
municipal links greens here are in poor shape. They are better than that in my home town, and in a lot of other places. “Your city ought to manage this thing better and turn more money back to the courses to develop the greens. The employees and professionals are of high caliber, but when you play these courses you feel like you have been invited to a dinner only to be served with food that couldn’t be digested.”
State Open Warmup
ERMAN UEBELE, professional of the Beechwood golf course, LaPorte, announced that the contestants in the State Open Golf Championship will have time to gain a pre-tournament warmup in a pro-
amateur event to be held there Aug. 18. The Open itself will be Aug. 18 and 20, with 38-holes of medal play each day over this par 72 course. Figured from the back tees, which will be used in the tournament, the length of Beechwood is 6754 yards, and it is laid out to provide a premium for accurate second shots. This is particularly true on the par ‘4, 443-yard fourth hole. The green there has a narrow apron with traps and bushes as guards. On No. 8, a 5 par, 500-yard hole known as Duffer’s Despair, there is a 90-de-gree dogleg out 270 yards. On drives of less than that the players will have to go over trees, which are out of bounds, to get up to the green.
big Jaseball show next Tuesday night at the Indianapolis Voiture of the Forty and the 100th anniversary of baseball. Besides the game lis Millers, there will be a program of stunts, march(left to right) Mrs. Lester Morman, in charge of Fred Spencer, Forty and Eight chef de dt, Forty and Eight correspondent; Mrs. Wendell De
Net Titleholders Face Tough Foes
. RYE, N. Y., Aug. 10 (U.P.) —Both defending champions, Alice Marble of Beverley Hills, Cal, and Bobby Riggs of Chicago, faced stiff opposi-
‘I tion today in the quarter-finals of
the Eastern Grass Court Tennis Championships. Miss Marble, Wimbledon and National titleholder, was pitted against Mary Arnold of Los Angeles, who scored an upset over Great Britain's Mary Hardwick yesterday. Riggs, Wimbledon crown wearer and America’s chief Davis Cup hope, was matched with Bryan (Bitsy) Grant, the diminutive jumping bean from Atlanta. Riggs made. a better showing in yesterday’s third round than in the two previous brackets, eliminating Gardnar Mulloy of Miami, Fla. in straight sets after being 0-3 in the first set. Other men’s maiches today brought together: Henry Prusoff, Seattle, vs. Ladislav Hecht, Czecho-
slovakia; Frankie Parker, Pasadena,
Cal, No. 2, vs. John Hope Doeg, Rumson, N. J,
Hunt, Washington, D. C., No. 8.
Corby Davis Signs
CLEVELAND, O., Aug. 10.—Corby former Indiana University fullback, was under contract today with the Cleveland Rams of the National Professional Football League.
Davis,
clodyne
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and Welby Van Horn, Los Angeles, vs. Gilbert A.
Six Teams Remain In Printer Tourney Times Special boii
BALTIMORE, Aug. 10.—Sjx teams
‘| remained in the running today in
the Union Printers’. International baseball tourney. Leading the pack are New York and Detroit, tied for first place.- : Others are Washington, Indianapolis, St. Louis and Boston. In yesterday’s games Detroit defeated Washington, 12-11, and Boston, 9-0; New York beat Chicago, 16-2; Washington downed Cincinnati, 207; St. Louis swamped Pittsburgh, 18-1, and Indianapolis drew a bye.
Card 70 to Capture Pro-Amateur Affair
Registering a 170, a team composed of O. E. Cummings of Fortville, Urban McGuire of Speedway and Markey List of Indian Lake triumphed in yesterday's pro-amateur golf tournament at the Indian Lake course. : Second place went to E. Rutherford of Anderson and E. R. McVey and J. P. Williams of Fort ville. They had a 71.
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Mako Teams With Mulloy
CHESTNUT HILL, Mass., Aug. 10 (U. P.) —Gene Mako of Los Angeles, named yesterday to the U. 8. Davis Cup squad, will pair with Gardnar Mulloy, University of Miami, Fla. amateur tennis coach, in the National Doubles, it was announced today. Other new entries for the competition which starts Sunday at Longwood Cricket Club were Adrian Quist and Jack Bromwich of Australia's Davis Cup Team; Jack Crawford and Harry Hopman, also of Australia; Jack Tidball of Los Angeles and Morey Lewis of Kenyon, O.. College, and Charlie Hare of England and Ladislav Hecht of Czechoslovakia. Only one more team will be selected to complete the list of 32. In the mixed doubles, Bobby Riggs, another U. 8. Davis Cupper from Chicago, will pair with Kay Stammers of England and Crawford will team with Betty Nuthall
| Two Irish Gridders - | Get Coaching Jobs Indisnapolis Times, Thurs, Aug. 19, 1989
SOUTH BEND, Ind. Aug. 10 (U. P.) —Max Burnell and Harvey Foster, former Notre Dame University football players, will assume coach-
in September, it was announced today. Burnell, a right half back, was signed by South Bend Catholic. Foster, a lineman, will replace Louis Szaho at Central Catholic.
Deaths—Funerals
A
ing roles at South Bend high schools |
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BISHOP—Lewis Q., entered into rest Wednesday, 50 years, husband of ! Helen Bishop, father of wis, Ro! Lee and Richard Allen Bishon, brother of Ch s Bishop of dien< apolis, Mrs. William Arnold, Mrs. Charles Schaffer and Grant Bishop of Muncie, Service Saturday, 3 p. m., HARRY W, MOORE PEACE C . Burial Washe ngton Park. [Muncie (Ind.) paper please y.1
CROSBY—Margaret Mary, beloved wife of John Crosby, mother of Sister Agnes Christine, Helen, Jo ni Cath=rs. Helen Bren-
erine Crosby, sister of . H d Mrs. Josephine Lohrstorfer,
; Ba aor etery Friends invited. y : gery» GARING—Anna Mae, beloved daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Garin * 493 Luett Ave.. sister of Charles and Robert Garing. Mrs. Allen Webster and Mrs, Guy Ellis, died suddenly at Evansville, Ind. Friends may call a BY MORTUAR Friday. 8:30 at the Eoaneatar: ici Holy Cros Cemetery Friends invited. oly ery,
HODSON—Henry A.
Tuesday, age 87 years, late Sarah Hod: {i Hodson. Servic By Veritas Masonic Temple, 3350 Ro . Friends may call at residence, 3019 N. Gale, from 10 a. m. Thursday until noon Friday and at the temple until hour of service, Burial Washin Park CemePEACE
tery. HARRY . 00, CHAPEL in charge. RE
{KEEPERS—John W., husband of Gertrude
E. and father of Mrs. Bennett nassed away Wednesda, ices Friday, 2 AL
GOMERY F ridian St. Friends Washington Park. Frien the Funeral Home after day. KINNEY—Nettie May, beloved wife of David J. Kinney, mother of John, Herbert and Melvin Kinney and Mrs. Mar Esther Patterson sister of Joseph and Thomas Keys, passed away Wi . Funeral Saturday 3 p. m. from . PEL, Ill 10th. Burial Washington Park. ‘Friends Fadayt at the chapel after 10 a. m,
MILLER—Jennie, of 917 N. Wallace St., entered into rest Tuesday, age 84 sister of Byron Horn, grandmot Mary L. Davis. Services Friday, 3 pb. at HARRY W. MOORE PEACE C Burial Crown Hill cemetery.
RUND—Rillie June, wife of Elmer and mother of Mrs. Howard J. ie posecd away Tuesday evening. Services
NERAL 1 54 W : , 1934 W. Michigai t. Rpionas vind Burial Memorisl ‘Pari C . s ma . neral home any time 5 wo 8 Tu
SURBER—Oliver J., husband of Ethel Surber (deceased), passed away at his home, 1657 Maynard Dr.. Homecroft, , Aug. 9. Friends may call at esidence Thursday evening. ice Saturday, ¢ p. m. at the sbyteria Church. Burial Cemetery.
Greenwood
Card of Thanks 2
TOL—We wish to express our appreciation for the many ote of kin he and expressions of ymbathy and condolence extended by. our friends, relatives and neighbors during the recent illness and death of our beloved mother, Minnie Ren" Abia ‘ND SRS. OTH STRANAHAN.
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