Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 July 1937 — Page 24
PAGE 24
Scores Upset
In Golf Final At Hammond
Conquers Seven Time Winner of Women’s Championship, by 3 and 2.
(Continued from Page One)
vear in the quarter-finals of the
State tourney by Miss Dunn. Miss Ellis toured the first nine in 43, compared to Miss Dunn's was two up at the turn. Miss Dunn's | wildness continued at the start of |
the second nine and she dropped |
the first three holes in a row to
become 5 down. Miss Ellis gave her a glimmer of hope, however, when she lost the next three holes as Miss Dunn re- | covered some of her normal form to score even pars.
Ends on Sixteenth
The finish came on the short, tricky 16th hole. Miss Ellis’ tee | shot was a foot off the green, but | Miss Dunn's high pitch shot buried itself in a trap. The champion attempted an explosion shot, but her ball stopped 40 feet short ot the pin. Miss Ellis chipped 20 feet short of the pin as Miss Dunn's putt slid two feet past the pin. Miss Ellis rimmed the cup to miss her par three. But Miss Dunn thereupon missed the short two-footer which would have prolonged the match, and when Miss Ellis tapped her putt into the cup a new champion Was crowned. Miss Ellis, whose home club is Meridian Hills at Indianapolis, has Been knocking at the door of the championship for several years and is known as one of the state capital's finest golfers. Won Title Seven Times Miss Dunn, a telephone switchboard operator, has won the title seven times, the last four in succession and seemed headed toward her eighth championship when she eliminated Dorothy Gustafson of South Bend, medalist in this year's tournament. It was this victory over Miss Gastafson in the face of keen odds which established Miss Dunn as the favorite today. But Miss Ellis rose to the occasion, even as Miss Dunn had vesterday, and piaved cham- | pionship golf except for brief lapses | caused principally by the weather. The cards in the final round were: | Par out ............ 545-455-345—40
Miss Dunn ........ 555-445-566—43 | Miss EIS ......0... 585-545-555—43
. 555-345-348
. 576-345-5 454-456-4
Miss Dunn ....... Miss Ellis
Tribute Paid To Umpires
23) |
Com inued from Page
“We like to hire as manv of these deserving fellows as possible,” says Mr. Connolly, “These three like work, but a plaver seldom makes a | good umpire. Fred Marberry, for one, didn’t like having to give up | his friends among the plavers.” The umpire, you see, doesn't travel with players, nor stop in the same hotel, and avoids all social
contact with them to prevent | charges of favoritism and, of course, arguments. He doesn’t, however, lead the lonely life you may suppose. Most big league umpires are entertaining companions with a bright | sense of humor and have friends all | over the circuit. { The rookie umpires pay is $3600. | After five years this has mounted | to about $7000. Outstanding um- | pires like Bill Klem will get us high | as $12,000. Unlike the players, must buy all their equipment | (mask, chest protector, uniforms, shoes) and they have to pay their meals and hotel bills while on the road, about 175 days. Figure this up at, say, $7.50 per day and you | can see the poor old umps doesn’t have much left. He would seem perfect prey the money-waving gambler. But | don’t whisper anything like that | around one of the 24 stalwart, clear- | eved gentlemen, He won't call you out—he’ll knock you out into the middle of the next inning.
NEXT — G roundkeepers, club. house caretakers, and bat boys.
SAVOLDI DOWN UNDER MELBOURNE, Australia, July 23. —Joe Savoldi and Vie Christy, American wrestlers, are throwing local citizens over here.
the umpires
|
for
SWING IT, JTMMY NEW YORK, July 23.-—Jimmy Hines, the golfer, won a lot of danc- | ing cups with his wife as a partner when the Charleston craze was in! swing.
EVERY SUIT A BIG BARGAIN!
Thoaoughly rec™ditioned, sterlized and cle N ned —must not be Toni wis the general run of unredeemed gare ments
All (abrics, All sizes,
all
FAIRBANKS
213 EAST WASHINGTON ST.
45 and |
| day
| For
| Sunday | Norton Beer at Riverside 3; Printers |
| Softball ; ( Stadium promises to be a real bat- | i | tte. The local Eli Lilly team is to | §
| play
regulars,
CHARLES I. BARNETT, Mgr. Clothing Dept.
JEWELRY
Local Cadet Wins 440 at F ort Meet
»
A. V. Martin, Indianapolis, Company A, a member of the C. M. T. C now in training at Ft. Har-
yesterday.
dash which he won in a track meet held at the Fort, His time was 56:4.
Three hundred and
rison, is shown breasting the ‘tape In the 90-yard fifty cadets took part in the “competition.
Joe Speaks His Mind About Squawkers;
Thinks Ryder Cuppers Talk Out of Turn
By JOE WILLIAMS
July 23.—Some peoRogers Hornsby is the best manager in baseball and possibly he is; but there must be <omething elementary wrong with a guy that can’t hold a jeb. He's gotten the bounce so often he's beginning to look like an India rubber nan Relatives as well
NN. TEW YORK, ple insist
| a
as intimate friends |
of Mr. Lefty ODoul will be pleased to know there is no truth
in the report the
big Californian is considered |
being as the next manager of the Brooklyns. Nobody could possibly dislike the that much. Umpires can be and frequently are wrong, of course, but Mr, Burleigh Grimes’ continuoys wrangling with | the guessers in blue is becoming very dull and boring. A manager doesn’t have to get himself heaved out of the ball game every other day just to prove he has an interest in winning This is small-time stuff. Somebody should tell Mr. Grimes he's back in the big leagues even if he can’t prove it by looking at the | Brooklyn ball club. » » » AYRBE it should be called the!
Ryder squawk team. I am referring to the group of American |
Williams
| golf {Shunned for
gentleman
| fair, ‘unfair for the British he didn’t say. |
golfers who just returned from England where thev took a rather thor-
ough pasting in the British Open. |
Their freehand comments on the quality of British sportsmanship and the ability of the man who beag them are scarcely calculated to promote international amity, or even casual respect. The American Ralph Guldahl, ter in the Hollywood movie studios
champion,
two vears back, didn’t care for the
the British course, ne
British weather, or the British spectators, and, doesn’t think he'll ever
immediately, make over and teach their better manners,
weather their golf courses patrons
very dismal and melancholy place.
Specifically, Mr. Guldahl com[plains about the design of the Car-
| noustie course where some of the |
| traps seemed queerly placed to him, | Indeed he called them definitely un- | But whether they were just as |
The British Open was won by Mr. Henry
him. Back on their home grounds | the Americans are saying he isn't |
so much, that he'd have to struggle | mateh race.
to stay up with our first 10. But he | | didn't have to struggle so desper- | ately over there, and he was facing | | all the topnotch Americans.
Even if there was any justifica-
| Baseball—Softball
Joe's Gang will play the E. Washington St. Auto Glass team Sunat Brookside. The Gang lost a close contest to the Graul Bulldogs 12 to 11 recently. For games writes Joe Price, 4058 E. 16th St.
The Bridgeport Blues will meet | the Ialls City Hi-Brus at Bridgeport Sunday. All Bridgeport players please notice.
The Indianapolis Firemen will play at Connersville Sunday. Stone and Huffman will form the Connersville battery and Weimer and Agle will work for the locals,
Tuxedo Cardinals
‘To Play Kokomo
The Tuxedo Cardinals will travel | to Kokomo to play the Advertisers Sunday. All players will meet at 208 S. Summit St. at 10:30 a. m. | The club has open dates in August. | games write R. Day at the | above address. | The Graul Bulldogs will play the | | Crosstown Merchants Sunday. The Bowers “Envelope team will meet the Polk Milk nine tomeorrow afternoon at Riverside 2. All Bowers players report at the diamond by 1:30 o'clock. In
the Em-Roe Senior League
Fields Tavern will play |
oppose Christamores at Brookside 1, and Ye Tavern Brews will take on |
| the Armours at Riverside 5. League
standings follow:
Printers Norton Beer Fields Tavern ... Christamores . . Ye Tavern Brews . Armours
Lillys Clash Sunday With Carliners
Sunday night's Em-<Roe League game at
State Softball
Shelbyville's Kennedy Oar- | liners. The loca
the Shelby County aggregation is|{
a game behind the Lillys. Both are |
within striking distance of first
| place, held by the Patrick Hemy | Beers of Marion.
Tonight at the Stadium, Armour & Co. plays Real Silk and Kingan & Co. meets Crown Products in Manufacturers’ League games To-| |
30
Others at $5.00 up
single and Sh Breasted slims and ston
colors,
LOAN Co.
morrow
| Dodge vs,
3
ls are in third place while | | §
night De Golyer Printers | and Hoosier Equipment are sched- |
luled in the feature game with Lin-
ton Radio Girls and Sevmour Girls
| playing a preliminary.
Last night's Manufacturers’ games proved one-sided affairs, Eli Lilly Co. swamped Van Camps, 18 to 3, and Chevrolet Body Belt, 14 to 3.
Association Games
Over Week-End
Schedules in the Amateur Baseball
Industrial League tomorrow: Link Belt Link Belt Ewart at Riverside 1 Lilly Varnish Co. vs. Chevrolet Bedy at Rhedius 2, and Magic Chefs vs. Regional All Stars at Rhodius 1, Manufacturers Les ue tomerraw: U. 8, Tires vs. ory E. Atkins Co, at Riverside 3, Harrison at Ft. Harrison. Co-operative Leag Malleables vs. Kembler Radio at Brookside 1: Polks Mik vs. Bowers Envelope Co, at Riverside 2, and Real Silk vs. UERWA at Garfield 3.
Mr, | who was a carpen- |
go back. | This is very distressing. Plainly the | British should get a new brand of |
all time by Mr, Gul- | dahl, the empire would surely be a |
Cotton in a manner which | seemed to impress everybody bul [the Americans who couldn't catch
| two. Travers | purse,
| ers when | due.
| tion for the Americans’ squawk it seems to me they make themselves look pretty small in attempting to
belittle the merits of Mr. Cotton's |
victory. They make themselves look like poor losers. They leave themselves open to the charge ‘hat they can’t take it. And maybe they jean’t, be on them. Walter Hagen and Bobby Jones wrote many thrilling chapters in the history of British golf; they became beloved figures on the other side: they did much to strengthen the ties of sportsmanship and mutual understanding between England and America. And I have a feeling it will take more than the noisy destroy these Sentiments. nN nn
| OMPOON who ho most of | the spring chasing War Ad- | miral around various tracks comes | back to the races in the Arlington | classic at Chicago tomorrow. It { was thought the Admiral will make | his return at the Saratoga meeting which starts Monday, and the feud of the 33-year-old rivals would start all over. But this isn't | have been, anyway. | the only wav Pompoon
to be. Couldn't As it turns out and the
| Admiral could have been brought
together at Saratoga would be a They aren't eligible to start in any one race. Their owners failed to nominate them so they would come together. The Admiral is nominated for four fix- | tures at the Spa, Pompoon for only Neither is nominated for the which carries a $20,000 a circumstance which sug- | gests the owners weren't especially | high on ther respective oat munchthe nominations were Sometimes it's as hard to about baby horses as baby They sure can fool you,
i A SA AA BN
tell girls.
BE
— RTT
downed Link | |
Indianapolis | Association for | tomorrow and Sunday follow:
at Riverside 8: vs Sehwitzer-Cummings | and Mairbanks-Morse vs. |
ue tomorrow: National |
Mallorys | 4
Rockwood Manufacturing Co, League to- |
morrow:
Smith-Hassler-Sturm Big Six Sunday: Stangary Nut Lawrence A, C. at Krogers vs. auliing Ellenberger 1, and General Biectric Si ance Co. vs. New Bethel at Riverside 1
Margarine Co. Garfield 3. KEMBA
The Triangle A. C. wants games
Pullevs vs. Bases at Riverside 1, | | and the Machine Shop vs. the Foundry at | Riverside 6. League
Auto Electric Co. at |
| for Sundays with city teams. They |
defeated the 22d St, Merchants re- |
cently, 13 to 6, in an Em-Roe Wednesday Night League game,
IT'S UNIFORMLY
GOOD
F. W. Cook Co ie
ws Holy Oross A team will play |
Joan of Arc Sunday at River- | All Holy Cross plavers please | | take notice.
i,
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
| DOROTHY ELLIS DEFEATS MISS DUNN FOR STATE TITLE
Playing Races
Led to Ouster Rajah Claims
Interfere With His Job, He Insists.
By United Press 8ST. LOUIS, July Rogers Hornsby, ousted er 3 the St. Louis Browns, said today his dismissal from the American League club was a result of his fondness for betting on horse races. “But my betting activities at no time interfered with my judgment in handling the club,” he added. Hornsby dented he had violated any part of his two-year contract. “When I came to terms with Mr, Barnes last November, I did not agree to discontinue betting on horses,” Hornsby asserted. ‘I have wagered on the horses for vears and vears. It's great sport with me. 1 may be wrong on the matter but it's Rog Hornsby's idea of enjoy
Certainly the proof seems to |
ing himself.” Hornsby said he was called to Barnes’ office Wednesday and asked if he was still betting on horses. “T looked him straight in the eyes | and said: ‘Yes, Mr. Barnes, What | about it?’ “He seemed surprised and then, turning in his chair he reached for a letter in a desk drawer and handed it to me. I read it. It was the anhouncement of my release. I told him it was ©. K. by me-—but, I added that he'd have to pay me in full for the complete term of my contract.”
Saylor Entered in Race at Rockville
bleatings of the Guldahls to
ROCKVILLE, Ind, July 23-—- | Everett Saylor, blond Dayton flash, | who is leading all rivals for driving | honors in the Central States Racing Association will be fighting to pro- | teet his lead in the auto races at
here, Sunday afternoon, A total of 23 drivers has been signed by the races to date. Bob Newhall, nationally known sports commentator of Cincinnati, will be guest announcer,
SWIM MEET SCHEDULED tional one-mile junior swim for
women will be held at the New York | Bayville A. C. July 31.
Betting Activities Did Not!
the Jungle Park Speedway, north of |
NEW YORK, July 23.-—The a |
FARR WOULD BE FOURTH WELSH WORLD CHAMP.
Bu NEA Service EW YORK. July 23-1 Tommy Farr should be successful in his attempt to knock the heavyweight crown from Joe Louis’ kinky head at Yankee Stadium, Aug. 26, he will become the fuorth world titleholder produced by Wales. Jem Driscoll, feather; Jimmy Wilde, flyweight, and Freddie Welsh, lightweight, were Welsh world champions,
Bout Added to
| | | | { |
Nationally and known mat performers will see action on the “bargain bill” wrestling card Tuesday night at Sports Arena, where a special semiwindup will fea- |
grappling instructor at Indiana University.
today to report that four instead of the customary three bouts will | staged. [111., faces Irish Dan O'Connor, | Poston, in the headliner, | Thom, claimant of championship of Australia, semiwindup. Chris Zaharias, will take on the “Red Devil,” masked matman, horn, 225, Germany, opponent yet to be named.
CANCEL FL YING PLANS
the light heavyweight in
pame with Southern
Oct. 9.
MORMONS LIKE BASKETBALL
| Church of Latter Day Saints,
| USED BICYCLES | $6.95 up
| Slightly Used Balloon Tired BICYCLES, $14.95 Up
Wrestling Card
internationally |
ture the appearance of Billy Thom,
Promoter Lloyd Carter of the Her- | ‘cules A. ©. returned from Chicago | °©'S plunge in and autemps to ve- | the umpires.”
the
217, Pueblo, Colo, 218, a and Milo Steinis to.oppose an
COLUMBUS, O., July 23.-<Objec-[tions of parents of football players | caused Ohio State to cancel plans to fly the team to Los Angeles for hg California |
SALT LAKE, July 23.-—Basketball is the chief sport of followers of the Their
Gel in the Swim—
FRIDAY, JULY 28, 1937
ree dtl
Combine Pleasure With Preparedness for Future
Ry JACK POBUK
Noted Swimming Instructor Exercise, fun, and preparedness for danger that may
lurk in the
future can be combined while playing at the beach.
| suit, leap into the waves and see | shore first. But It is more than fun & ~it is also good preparation for the | | day when your boat mav upset and | you are forced to swim for your life. In all your games, however, guard | against remaining under water | too long. Such a practice is of no value to your | prove harmful. n on Ed CORKS pupils considerable is good exercise. it some time. . . The players—any number—line | up on the edge of the float and sev- | eral handfuls of corks—or other bouyant objects—are scattered on | the surface of the water and allowed to spread out. Then, on a given signal, the play-
pleasure and You should try
|
be | Dorve Roche, 220, Decatur, 222, while 177, battles Frank Wolff, 178,
well-being and may |
The game of corks has given my |
For instance, it is loads of fun to don old clothes over your bathing
who can disrobe and get back to
“trieve as many corks as ‘possible, You can make the rules of tha | game to suit yourself whether vou want the players to return to the | float with one cork at a time or | bring them back all at once, The player who retrieves the most | corks wins.
NEXT—Sculling.
COURTESY TO UMPIRES
PROVIDENCE, R. I, July 23.= Umpires are often the targets of baseball fans in the big leagues and | even college arbiters come in for | their share of ribbing. At a Rhode | Island State game one of the fans | evoked plenty of laughs when dure | ing the seventh inning he shouted, “Let's all get up out of respect to
ma i A a
THE BEST IN DRINKS lB INVITING ATMOS PHERE
[Foros make it a year-round game. |
ho
BLUE POINT a
incoln
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of
TAX PAID
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Sold for vehicle tanks only==not to be taken away in containers.
PE
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Made in the Most Modern Refinery by the Most Modern Methods—the BEST GAS You Can Buy!
These Prices Subject to Change Without Notice |
HOOSIER
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“Wot a KMerock. era co Cer loadd’
