Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 July 1937 — Page 13

TUESDAY, JULY 20, 1937

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PAGE 13

* BUDGE WINS, U. S. TO MEET BRITISH FOR DAVIS CUP

Don Rallies The Guy Has No Etiquette. . ....... by Mullin

To Beat Baron

And Break Tie

| | |

Red Head Triumphs After

Grant Bows to Henkel, 7-5, 2-6, 6-3, 6-4.

By United ress WIMBLEDON, England, July 20. —Coming from behind a two-set handicap, Don Budge of Oakland, Cal, today defeated Baron Gottfried Von Cramm to give the United States victory over Germany in the interzone final Davis Cup tennis series. Scores were 6-8, 5-7, 6-4, 6-2, 8-6. Budge's triumph came after Henner Henkel of Germany had defeated Bryan (Bitsy) Grant of the United States, 7-5, 2-6, 6-3, 6-4. The U. S. team won the right to meet England, the cup-holder, in the challenge round late this week.

Budge Turns on Heat

In the first game of the first set Budge was unable to deal with Von Cramm’s cannonball services and lost at love. Budge opened his own service with a double fault but followed with an ace, and then got his famous backhand crosscourt stroke working. Von Cramm won the third on a neat netcord backhand pass. Budge attacked the net to win the fourth and Von Cramm followed suit in the fifth. In the sixth Budge turned on the heat on his services to win at love but was forced onto the defensive in the seventh. Budge outsteadied Von Cramm in the eighth and again in the ninth to break service but twice netted and once overdrove to lose the tenth. Von “ramm put over some vicious drives to win the eleventh, Budge won the twelfth on a murderous service. The German outspeeded Budge in the 13th and broke service when Budge overdrove the baseline in the 14th to lose the set. Games followed service in the second set until the 12th when the German stylist broke through, scoring a fine lob, and then two perfect backhand crossers gave him the game. Von Cramm appeared slightly speedier than the redheaded Californian, and also displaved greater aggressiveness. He went to the net more often and pummeled both corners for winners. Grant Outmaneuvered Henkel outmaneuvered Grant in the first three games which required only four minutes to play. Grant then held service in the fourth to win at love, scoring with corner drives while displaying proper length. Penkel broke Grant again in the sixth to lead, 5-1, but here Bitsy vegan to find his game. The crowd velled when Grant came within one foot of the net to score a magnificent angled backhand drop volley and he went on to win the game and keep the set alive. Henkel was at set point three times in the eighth but Bitsy slowed up his game with soft chop shots,

forcing the German into errors. In |

the 11th outserved close out the set.

and 12th games Henkel

Grant dominated the second set. | He broke service in the first, third | a —— and fifth games to lead, 5-love, but| WASHINGTON, July 20.—Hobo

and |

|

Si Johnson Helps Cards

(Continued from Page 12) 10th and gave him an triumph. | After losing the next three games | to the New York Giants, the Cards | called upon Si again yesterday, and he rewarded them with a six-hit| performance and a 3-2 victory. The defeat dropped the Giants a full game behind the leading Chi- | | cago Cubs. Tex Carleton also hurled | six-hit ball to give the Cubs a 9-0 { victory and a clean sweep of their | four-game series against Brooklyn. A ninth inning run on Paui | Waner's double and Gus Suhr's sin- | gle gave Pittsburgh a 6-5 decision over Philadelphia. | In the American League, the lead- | ing Yankees defeated the Cleveland | Indians 8-5 behind the effective | pitching of Lefty Gomez who scored | his fifth straight and 13th win of | [the year. Chicago kept pace with a | 6-4 decision over Boston, and Detroit | [downed Washington 8-4, behind the | | eight-hit pitching of Rookie Cletus

| (Boots) Poffenberger. Henk Green-

and outdrove Grant to |

| berg paced a 13-hit attack with his | Hobo Williams Gets | Big Chance Tonight

| 21st home run and two singles. .

Henkel broke in the sixth. Graat | Williams, who perfected a jolting

was placing well from all angles, | punch fighting all comers for { showing a neat variance of length | circus, will have his big chance at | and pace. He also often took to the | l net where he registered angled vol- {meets

a

professional fame tonight when he | Middleweight Champion

leys the German could not touch. ! Freddie Steele of Tacoma |

Henkel was repeatedly outing and |

over-driving, especially with backhand which reientlessly. Henkel retreated to the baseline after the fifth game but Grant outsteadied him. Breaks Grant's Service Henkel remained at the baseline throughout most of the third set and outsteadied the small American. Henkel broke Grant's service in the fourth game and twice scored clean aces in the fifth. Grant scored a pretty forehand pass to win the sixth while Henkel twice missed the sidelines. Henkel came to the net to close out the set. In the fourth set each alternately scored with passes in the first gane which Grant finally won on

§

his | weight will enter th grant bombarded | Wig

light - heavy- | Griffith Stadi- | ring, where more than 10.000 |

The Washington

| fans were expected to gather if the | rain of early morning subsided. with

|a weight advantage of more than 12

ra service | Grant finally after trailing love-40. Henkel made (for the decisive point,

GOLFING

pounds. hice returns of two neat dropshots | Grant had sent him and twice aced | the Atlantan to win the sixth game. | Grant won the seventh at love as | Henkel drove weakly into the net. | The German, however, sent over untouchable services to win the eighth game at love. Henkel played to | Grant's failing backhand to break service in the ninth game and won (.e next game and set and match. netting a backhand

The Medical and Dental Societies will ment tomorrow afternoon at the Broadmoor Country Club. The first

Last year the physicians w : ! A banquet will follow the matches at 6 ® ris

foursome will tee off at noon.

awarded.

u » 2

EDMORE SMITH, well known | light of his friends.

local golfer, set a new amateur record for Pleasant Run recently when he toured the course in 65, eight under par. Smith carded eight birdies, four on each nine holes, ‘and he equaled par on all the others.

H. Chestnut, P. Kohiman and J. | Reeves were other members of the |

foursome.

The professional record for Pleas- [to 361%. ant Run is 60 made by Herman series “etween the two clubs. John

Uebele years ago. = » ” TACOB F. DELKER won tournament held by the Real Estate Board at the Broadmoor Country Club. Delker equaled blind par for a total of 71. John Bruhn was second with a 72. He finished

three strokes in front of Robert Postoffice tournament held at South Moynahan and Col. C. B. Durham. Grove with a par 72. Prize winners Low net honors were won by I the blind bogey competition were Urban K. Wilde, Herbert Dungan |Cliffie Gunt,

and Ford Woods.

the low gross group. » » » A= weeks ago this column reported that a Pleasant Run golfer who was nearly paralyzed by injuries received

accident had returned to play at the

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All had 68s. | Priest, Ira Harbert, Eg. Edward A. Hyde and Mr. Moynahan | Bell, Lew Black, George LaFeiney. finished one stroke behind Delker |Erval Rumple, Dave Stutsman and with 84s to take second prizes in (ROY Martin,

in an automobile |

|

hold their annual golf tourna-

P. m. when prizes will be |

| East Side course, much to the de-

| Pleasant Run has another one of | these ‘never say die” kind in Joe | Clements, Who received a broken back In an auto accident last fall. he was Mh for weeks, but when e recover began to play i . With the help of braces, Ny

on =” 2 HILLCREST team of 34 players defeated a Bloomington team [recently at the Hillerast course, 651 This victory evened up the

| David, No. 1 man on the Pu | Squad, was best for Hillcrest ae Bert Kingan Jr, was a stroke | behind, and Phil Talbot, former I. | U. star, paced the losers with a 73.

| » = ~ K= LOUCKS won the second | annual championship of the

Bill Russell, Jeff

Welsh, Joe

| Another tournament will be held next month at Pleasant Run.

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Baseball —Softball

Lillys to Meet Guide Lamps

Guide Lamp of Anderson and Eli Lilly Co. are to meet in an Em-Roe State Softball League game at Soft- | ball Stadium tomorrow night at

The Anderson team dropped a 12-inning 6-to-5 decision to U. S. Tires in its initial local State loon appearance and is hopeful of evening matters at the expense of the Lillys. | Tonight at the Stadium the regu- | lar Em-Roe Manufacturers League games are scheduled: American Can Co. vs. Indianapolis Glove Co. | in the first game at 8 o'clock; U. S. | Tires vs. Big Four Railroad at 9:15. | In last night's Downtown Mer- | chants League games, Estate Range | defeated Geo. J. Marott, 5 to 4: Crescent Paper won from Vonnegut | Hardware, 15 to 2, and Wm. H. Block gained a 6-to-1 decision over | H. P. Wasson Co.

The

Brown Bombers trounced | at Northwestern Park. | | The Howard St. Merchants de. | feated the Apprentice Printers 5 to 4 in a Rhodius League game last night.

———. MeCordsville won a double-head- | er Sunday defeating Real Silk. 8 to |

3, and Fortville, il to 7. For games |

(Write Ray Hudson, McCordsville, |

Ind.

The Fountain Square Merchants won from Liehr's Tavern, 7 to 1. State or city teams desiring games write Woodrow Lyons, 1439 Shelby St, or call Dr. 1882.

The Wincel A. Cs want games for | next Sunday, and Aug. 8, 15 and 29 | The following teams are asked to take notice: West Side Merchants, Greenfield, and the Plainfield Commercials. Write H. E. Wincel, 1470 Charles St. The Kempler Radio team will practice tomorrow on Riverside 2 at 4:30 p. m. They play the Malleables Saturday at Brookside and at Zionsville on Sunday. The Radios defeated Bridgeport 4 to 3 in a recent game,

The Scven Ups want a game for next Sunday. Write Bill Rider, 921 E. 19th St. Greencastle please notice.

The City Firemen will play Connersville Sunday and Zionsville on the following Sunday. Games are sowrht for the rest of August.

“If it covers the floor . . . we have it” UNITED RUG And Linoleum Company 130 WEST WASHINGTON STREET OPssiit Tasiany Theat

an. ———

OUT-OF-PAWN

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Others at $5.00 up

Teams having access to Garfield 3 or Brookside 1 are asked to write John Howard, 2626 E. 10th St.

‘ZULU CANNIBALS’ IS NAME OF NEW NEGRO BALL CLUB

By NEA Sertice ETROIT, July 20.—The Zulu Cannibal Giants is the name of a semipro baseball team touring the Middle West. It is composed of players from Negro colleges. The boys perform in grass skirts instead of the regulation uniform,

AMATEUR BOUTS SCHEDULED TONIGHT

A program of boxing bouts sponsored by the Marion County Recreation Department, will be presented by the Northeast Community Center at the Washington Park Arena, 30th and Dearborn Sts. tonight. Hugh McGinnis, WPA boxing supervisor, said a new ring is being installed at Willard Park and a WPA instructor will be on the grounds daily from 1 to 6 p. m. to give instructions. Bouts will be scheduled for Willard on hursday

Open Tennis

nights. A)

Women Begin

MatchPlay At Hammond

Dorothy Gustafson Favored After Sparkling Round On First Day.

By United Press HAMMOND, Ind. July 20.-—Six-teen of Indiana's best women golfers today started the four-day grind of match play which will determine the State champion Friday afternoon. Blond Dorothy Gustafson of South Bend, who paced the qualifying round yesterday with a bril- | liant 76 over the Woodmar Country Club's sporty, wooded fairways, clashed today with a fellow townswoman, Mrs, Calvert Shorb of South Bend, who scored an 89 yesterday. Tournament observers already are favoring Miss Gustafson to take the championship if her game remains at its present peak form, | particularly since the play of the present, seven-time champion, Miss | Elizabth Dunn of Indianapolis, was unimpressive yesterday. Miss Dunn, who qualified with an 83, drew Mrs. P. J. Graham of South Bend for her first-round opponent today. Harriet Randall, long-driving Indianapolis champion who was run-ner-up for low scoring honors yesterday with an 82, will tangle with Mrs. Ben Olson of Indianapolis who shot a 90 in the qualifying trials. Other pairings for matches today | and the qualifying scores were: Mrs. Everett Batdorft, South Bend, 84, vs. Mrs. T. J. Orr, Hammond, 94; Lillian Rees, Indianapolis, 86, vs. Mrs, C. H. Eager, Hammond, 94; Dorothy Ellis, Indianapolis, 87, vs. Virginia Wisely, Terre Haute, 94; Mary Livengood, South Bend, 89, vs. Caroline Varin, Indianapolis, | 95; and Mrs. L. L. Sams, Elkhart, | 89, vs. Mrs. W. D. Cleavenger, Ham-

mond, 95.

Get in the Swim—

Don't Jump

(Fourteenth of a Series)

By JACK POBUK Noted Swimming Instructor HE call for help usually and quite naturally creates a panicky feeling within us. Our first impulse is to run to the rescue and plunge in aimlessly trying to offer assistance,

Although speedy action is re-

Tourney Set! Hi Times Special WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W. | Va.,, July 20.—The [first United States Open Tennis Tournament

Bridgeport wants a game for Sunday. The Blues won from the Fall | Creek Athletics, 9 to 0, and lost to | Kempler Radio, 4 to 3. Write] Charles Sager, Bridegport, Ind.

The Bohemian All Stars will play the Washington | Thev have open dates in the month of August. They defeated the Ko- | komo Advertisers, 15 to §, in a re- | cent game.

The Bowers Envelope squad will | hold a practice session at Riverside | 3 tomorrow at 4:30 p. m. |

The West Side A. Cs and the | West Side Merchants will play the second game of their series Sunday at Grande Park, The A. Cs won the first game, 9 to 2, and are scheduled for a game at Martinsville Aug. 1.

The Cumberland Merchants will play Knightstown at Cumberland Sunday afternoon.

Tuxedo Cardinals Defeat Bloomington

| made today. [to both

Packers Sunday. [in cash prizes for the pros and ap-

will be held Oct. 13 to 17 at the Greenbrier Golf and Tennis Club, according to an announcement The meet is open professionals and amateurs with a guarantee of $2000

propriate prizes for the amateurs. Play will include competition in men's doubles and singles. This tournament, the first of its kind in this country. was made pos= sible only after the Greenbrier Club had withdrawn its membership | from the U. S. L. T. A. last April. The club had conducted a poll among 800 ciubs, especially those affiliated with the U. S. L. T. A, and as a result found that they favored an open meet if it were sanctioned by the U. S. L. T. A. or the Professional Lawn Tennis Ase sociation. Realizing that the parent body of the U. S. L. T. A. the International Lawn Tennis Federation, would not sanction such a tournament, the Greenbrier Club broke away from the association. The Professional Tennis Association hfs

The Tuxedo Cardinals won from Bloomington, 7 to 4, behind the pitching of Marcum who allowed six hits. The Cardinals have open dates in August. Write R. Day, 208 S. Summit St.

Two Games Tonight In Water Polo Loop

There will be two games in tonight's City Recreation Department Water Polo League. In the first game the strong Ellenberger team will battle Garfield in Ellenberger Pool. The league leading Hoosier

| A. C. and Indianapolis A. C. teams | will battle it out in the final game.

The standings:

Hoosier A. C. Indianapolis A. C. Garfield Rhodius Ellenberger Willard

HUB BUCKS BUCS NEW YORK, July 20.—Carl Hub-

| bell, the screwball master, has beat- | len the Pittsburgh Pirates 33 times |

while losing only 13 decisions since

he broke into the National Langue |

in 1928.

wise sast

| indorsed the tournament, | “Big Bill” Tilden, Bruce Barnes, | Karl Kobeluh, Vincent Richards, and Capt. Valerian Yavorsky are | among those expected to compete.

SAUER NAMED COACH

DURHAM, N. H,, July 20.—George H. Sauer, former All-America fuliback at the University of Nebraska and for several years a member of the Green Bay Packers professional football team, has been named head football coach at the University of New Hampshire.

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quired, we must take a little time to think over the situation and decide the best steps to take.

Is it possible for the person in distress to be rescued without you having to plunge in? If so, throw him a life-buoy. Is there a boat handy? If so, use it. If you are forced to plunge in, remove your shoes and clothing. Upon approaching the victim, pause to determine the extent of his danger. If he appears to be very panicky, it is best for you to swim around to the back, or to dive under and come up from behind. Work him into a position for a cross-chest carry hola and take him to shore.

{ If he puts up a fight, relax. Bo

| NOT attempt to struggle with him, | Take a deep gulp of air and sub- |

merge. Invariably he'll let go. If not, you should pry yourself out of his hold beneath the water,

If Attempting a Rescue

YANKEES REPLACE

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and again secure the cross-chest carry hold. However, don’t content yourself with just this instruction. It is urged that you obtain the free booklets on life-saving offered by the American Red Cross and other organizations. Be prepared for an emergency.

NEXT—Diving pointers.

JOHNNY BROACA

ST. LOUIS, July 20.—The New | York Yankees recalled pitcher Kemp Wicker from their Newark farm of the International League | today to replace Johnny Broaca, who deserted the team without notice in Cleveland Sunday. Broaca checked out of the Yankee hotel Sunday and his whereabouts | are unknown,

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NINE BACKSTOPS HAVE TOILED FOR NATS THIS YEAR

By NEA Service ASHINGTON, July 20.— Nine different catchers have collected pay checks at one time or another from the Washington Nationals this season. They are Bolton, Lee, Hogan, Early, Millies, Crompton, Riddle, Gray, and Ferrell.

‘Rubber’ Match On Mat Program

Juan Humberto, 219, the Spanish matman who is known in wrestling circles as the “wildcat,” will clash with Dorve (Iron Man) Roche, 220, Decatur, Ill, to top the outdoor grappling bill tonight at Sports Arena. It is a “rubber” match that promises an unusual amount of action, Two newcomers are on the supe porting hill, Big Jim (Goon) Henry, 250, Tulsa, Okla., who faces Roy Graham, 235, Houston, Tex., and Abe Curry, 210, Jewish grappler from New York, who meets Jim Coffield, 215, Kansas City.

Reds Book Cubs for Night Game Aug. 20

CINCINNATI, July 20.—The Cine cinnati Reds and the Chicago Cubs will meet in a night game at Crosley Field Friday, Aug. 20. The two teams were to play their first and only game under the lights at the Cincinnati ball park July 12 but rain caused postponement. The revised schedule means that the Reds and Cubs will battle on the evening of Friday, Aug. 20, instead of in the afternoon and that the two teams will make up for the poste poned contest by playing a doubleheader Sunday, Aug. 22.

Aug. 1 Is Deadline On Fish Applications

Applications from conservation clubs and individuals for the stock= ing of lakes and streams with fish from the state hatcheries must be filed with the Division of Fish and Game, 406 State Library Building, Indianapolis, before Aug. 1 to be included in the fall planting schedule, While approximately a thousand applications are already on file, Vir= gil M. Simmons, Conservation Come missioner, said today that no ree quests have been received from seve eral counties. Planting of fish from the state hatcheries is to begin Aug. 1 and the delivery schedules must be completed at that time, he said.

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