Evening Star Newspaper, July 2, 1937, Page 15

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SPORTS. Guldahl British Open Favorite : Snead’s Prestige Also Is Increased by Cup Play Against English. BY FRANCIS J. POWERS, HICAGO, July 2.—“We're go- ‘ ing to keep possession of that | Ryder Cup,” Henry Picard told me a few hours after Ralph Guldahl had putted out for the National Open golf championship at| Oakland Hills, and the Hershey, Pa., professional proved himself quite a prophet. Remind me to have him check cver the gears of the Powers | Prognosticator, Ptd. that has been akipping too many cogs of late. Likely it's my fast back wing. At any rate the United States pro- feasionals hung on to the Ryder jug ! and accomplished zomething new by | winning the series in England. Here- tofore the home team always won, but the victory at Southport gives the Yankees a 4-to-2 margin in the | international matches. Since the next | of the series will be played in United | Btates the British have quite a job| ahead in 1939, unless they can round | up about seven more Henry Cottons, and the cotton crop never is very heavy in England and Scotland. | Guldahl in Fine Fettle, ALPH GULDAHL was the particu- Iar star in the Americans’ 4-point | victory. Paired with Tony Manero, | the reigning U. S. Open champion staged a great finish to beat Lacey and Cox in the foursomes, and in the | singles he trounced Alf Padgham, the | 1036 British title holder, 8 and 7. In| the singles Guldahl played some of his best golf and proved again what hie fellow professionals frequently have zaid, “‘one golf course is the same ax another to Ralph.” A freshman in | British competition, Guldahl now will become one of the outstanding favor- | ftes to win the open championship at Carnoustie next week. Henry Cotton was the only Briton | to play up to expected form. Cot- ton unquestionably is one of the; game's greatest shot makers, and, | while he was rather wild at South- | port, he whaled Tony Manero, 5 and | 3. and that's & feat, for the little Italian is a battler and & great fin- | isher. The only other British win- ner in the singles was David Rees, an | assistant professional from Wales, | who took the measure of Byron Nel- | son. | Mead's Comeback Strong. IT WAS satisfying to see that Sam Snead defeated Richard Burton, 5 | and 4. Kept out of the foursomes by Capt. Walter Hagen, Snead was in rare form for the singles and gave the | British gallery a preview of what may be expected when he fixes his sights on the open championship at Car- | noustie. Slammin’ Sam is very much | like Guldahl in that one golf course is the same as another when he is really hitting the ball. Sarazen, Dud- | ley and Picard all won their singles matches, 5o it can be said that the Americans are well tuned for the assault on the British open title; which was their secondary goal on| the trip abroad. | The British turned up a couple fine | young players in Sam King, who once served as a game keeper in Kent, and Rees. Those fellows showed plenty shots, and, with Cotton, give the | British a good foundation for their | 1939 Ryder Cup team. An effort is being made by the | sponsors of the Chicago $10,000 open | 23 minutes in the usual unorthodox | overrated tournament to have Cotton come out for that event. 1931, but at that time he had not tully developed his game and also was in some difficulties with the British P. G. A, which affected his play Bhould Cotton come over this Sum- mer, Americans will see one of the moet colorful players of the genera- tion. AGGIE NETMEN SCORE Default Averts Shutout Victory Over Census in Loop Match. Agriculture's tennis team scored a | 4-1 victory over Census yesterday in 8 Departmental League match on the Monument courts. Census won its only match through default. Follow- ing are summaries: Lovey and Steinhauser (A) de- | feated Cole and Janssen, 6—3, 6—1; Rulloda and Mosby (A.) defeated Bhanel and Tyler, 6—4, 6—2; Kube | and Hansen (C.) won by default over Byrd and Medlin; Harrell and Joy (A) defeated Dunn and Gamble, 6—4, | 8—6; Hoffecker and Fleming (A.) defeated Haywood and Linder, 5—7, 6—3, 6—2. LILY HARPER GOLFS TO VIRGINIA MEDAL Scores 77 in State Tournament, Missing Record When She Falters on Last Nine. Br the Associated Press. }{OT SPRINGS, Va., July 2—Low | qualifiers in the Virginia women's | golf tournament, including Medalist | Lily Harper, Portsmouth's defending | champion, were favered today to turn back opponents in the first round of | match play over the Homesteads course | without serious difficulty. 1 The low four, Miss Harper, Mrs. H.l N. Allen of Newport News, Mrs. C. G.| Quesenbery of Waynesboro and Mrs. | George Owen of Petersburg, faced con- tenders who came home with consider- ably higher qualifying cards yesterdly,’ Petite Lily, who lost a chance for a record-breaking medal by slipping | badly on the incoming nine, had & 77| in the qualifying round. i Mrs. Allen, runner-up to Miss Harper at Newport News last year, qualified for the championship flight with 104. Mre. Quesenbery and Mrs. Owen each posted an 86. Mat Matches By the Associated Press. ST. LOUIS—Nanjo Singh, 215, Bombay, India, defeated Big Chief Saunooke, 318, Cherokee, N. C., 1127.. Saunooke butted from ring. Parren Brockwinkel, 218, St. Louis, pinned Gene Bowman, 215, Chatta- nooga, Tenn, headlock, 26:42. SAN FRANCISCO.—Steve Stre- Mch, 190, Hollywood, drew with Joe Parelli, 185, Italy (each won fall {n time limit match). \ § | persuaded to yield to Benny's persistent A\George Luce. THE EVEN G_STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C,.FRIDAY, JULY 2 1937 Trips Abroad Spur Rassle Addicts Get Usual Eyeful at Weekly Mat Show | SPORTS L2 MILWAUKEE MEET T0 DECIDE BERTHS | Pan-American Games Also'i BY LAWSON ROBERTSON. Stadium this week end may qualifying for ‘the Pan-American | England, France, Sweden, Norway, Inspire Thin Clads to MILWAUKE. July 2.—The A see some record-breaking Oympics at Dallas, July 15, 16, 17 and Holland, Belgium, Germany and g€ Glenn Cunningham and Forrest | George Lenihan, in maintaining his reputation for villainy in the grappling spectacle at Grifiith Sta- dium last night favored Referee Al Bakhsh with some n ose-tweaking and eye-go uging attention. Here Ed Meske is shown preparing to regain his feet a. tossed out of the ring by the Lenihan man. stuff, but the lads’ principal aim is to be colo: script doesn’t call for something original. fter having been The heaving act is, of course, old rful and they can’t help it if the —Star Staff Photos. And here’s Meske again, suffering more indignities, but—you guessed it—he was the winner of the match. Russell Pins Wrestler, Who | | Is Pushed to Floor by | whose tendency to twist never | has been quelled even in the | of & grapple victory over Rudy Dusek, | but the unconvincing manner in which Benny, you see, was a bit too anx- jous to preserve order last night ar Referee Bortnick. Bumamv Bennie Bortnick, role of referee, and Reb Russell | today boasted the dubious distinction | they accomplished it probably has set ' the stage for a return match Griffith Stadium and promptly forced his roly-poly frame into the picture | ropes and proceeded to massage his features. Rudy mixed a bit of gouging and kneeing with his grappling, so Bort- nick bounced to the scene and tried to pry them apart. Dusek finally was! tugging and fell on his back. Russell pounced on Rudy and the customers | grabbed their hats. It lasted 21 min- utes. Meske’'s Head Spared. 'WO new villains sunk a bit lower in the estimation of local mat ad- dicts in the preliminary squirming. | George Lenihan was disqualified after 14! minutes of brawling with Ed! Meske. and he then sought to drape a | stool over Ed's head. A voung specta- | tor intervened long enough to allow police to reach ringside and squelch Lenihan. | Jack Hader improved his ranking as a villain by losing to Jack Kennedy in | manner. while other matches saw Cotton was over in | Henri Piers toil 30 minutes to a draw | fielder Joe Klutz with Jim Wright and Stanley Pinto | spill Doug Wryeoff in eight minutes through the medium of a crotch hold and body slam. PRESENT PREVIEW OF DAVIS CUP TLT Budge Plays Von Cramm for Wimbledon Title, Faces Him Also in Doubles. Es the Associated Press. IMBLEDON, England, July 2. — Peaturing America’s Don Budge and Baron Gottfried von Oramm, Ger- many’s No. 1 ace, in a duel for the singles crown, the all-England tennis championships today presented a pre- | view of the probable inter-zone Davis Cup final. In addition to clashing for the title | left vacant when Fred Perry of Eng- land turned professional, Budge and Von .Cramm squared off in the semi- finals of the men's doubles with Gene Mako and Heinrich Henkel as their respective partners. Budge, loser of only one set since arriving on England’s shores, was the 5-to-4 favorite to whip the German baron, Broke Even in 1935. VON CRAMM and Budge broke even the previous times they met in 1935 when the German beat the red- headed American in the semi-finals here only to have matters reversed in the Davis Cup inter-zone finals. The American ace already is in the finals of the mixed doubles with Alice Marble, the United States women's titleholder. They will meet the winner of today’s match between Yvon Petre and Mme. Rene Mathieu of France and Daniel Prienn, self-exiled German Jew, and Evelyn Dearman of England. ‘The only other match in which the Americans figured today was the women’s doubles semi-final in which Mrs. Dorothy Andrus of New Ydrk and Mme. Sylvia Henrotin of France were to meet the English team of Mrs. M. R-King and Joan Pittman. America’s final hope in the women's singles, Alice Marble, bowed yesterday to Jadwiga Jedrzejowska, 8—8, §—3. In the other semi-final Dorothy Round of England defeated Mme, Mathieu, 6—4, 6—0. — oo MRS. MORRIS VICTOR. Mrs. J. Morris won a blind bogey tournsment at Beaver Dam Country Club, with Mrs. Albert Haas second. Other finishers. in order. were Mrs. Frances Owens, Mrs. C. Purdy, Mrs. Ventres, Mrs, C. Range and Mrs. "POPPI OFF Utan. Man-Handler Harr: NE of the Beston writing boys took a long look at Wes Ferrell pitching “Up in Boston a lot of people had a theory that Wes was laying down when he was with the Red Sox. Now I'm beginning to believe it, myself. He doesn't look like the same the other day and said O pitcher."” It is not likely that a man who hates to lose as much as Ferrell deliber- | “laid down,” but the fact remains that Wes has won four out of five games since he was traded to the Nationals and the other was thrown away for him. If nothing else, Wes' performance in a Washington uniform has Mr. Stanley Raymond Harris, who manages the Jocal ately not hurt the status of firm. Ever since Mr. Harris was appointed a major league manager in 1924 | at the tender age of 27, he has been | After his first great success in those salad days of 1924 and 1925 he may have | drawn the wrath of some of the fans paper men, but Bucky never had much trouble with his ball players. The | tougher they came the better they played for him. Wes Perrell was supposed to be “tough” when Rudy clamped Reb against the | Anyway, that's what the Baston crowds sald. It was a fact that Wes did not get along with Joe Cronin. And | before he became a member of the Red Sox he didn't get along with | Walter Johnson at Cleveland. either. Harris was unimpressed by reports of Ferrell's feud with Cronin. Bucky had managed Wes in the past, of course, but it is not likely this would have mattered. He had not managed Ben Chap- man before the flery Alabaman came to Washington a year agn from the Yanks. But he was willing, nay anxious, to manage “im Chappie came under Bucky's wing, but nothing much happened. Ben simply changed from a .260 hitter into a guy who wound up the season with a .315 sverage. Red Sox Job Best. MOST of the so-called “tough guys" of base ball are found to have | reputations. Most fans probably like to believe that Out- stays up all night | drinking beer or hard liquor and | that he bawls out his manager if any- thing is said. For the most part, “tough” players are not so loose in | morals as they are vivid in imgania- | tion and overstocked temperamentally. Harris has deslt with plenty of strong-willed athletes in his 13 years of major league piloting. He had Dutch Ruether when he first became a manager . . . and Goose Goslin. At Detrot he found Gerald ‘Walker, then as untamed as a wild horse. At Boston in 1934 he found half a ball club with “reputations.” ‘That probably was one of Bucky's greatest managerial jobs . . . that 1934 term with the Red Sox. / Tom Yawkey was new in base ball and the work of rebuilding the Sox was not yet under way. When Harris went to Back Bay from Detroit he found he had fallen heir to a group of second-division ball players who had minds of their own and who not always used good judgment or prac- ticed moderation. Lured Ferrell Back. EDDIE MORGAN was the first baseman then. Eddie, came from Cleveland and was known as one of those “tough guys.” So was Bill Cissell, who was playing second base, and Lyn Lary, the Boston shortstop that year. Bill Werber, who devel- oped into a star that year, was known as a high-strung youngster who needed careful handling. Bob Grove was on that club but he wasn’t the Grove who used to perform pitching mira- cles for the Athletics, or even the Grove of today. ‘That 1934 season he won very few games for Bucky Harris. Grove had & sore arm and physicians were busy removing half of the gentleman's inner workings in an attempt to cure the soreness. As a result Mr. Grove ‘WAS & grumpy old man, sick in body and in mind. Jack Welch, who was not being nominated for office as a Y. M. C. A. secretary, also was one of Harris’ pitchers and, as if to borrow trouble, Bucky lured Wes Ferrell out of volun- tary retirement that season and nego- tiated for his purchase from the Indians. With an arm that seemingly was ready to drop off, Wes won 14 @ames and lost only 5. And the 1934 Red Sox, of all things, finished third! Free Rein Bucky’s Policy. HARRIS has no secret formulae for handling ball players who sup- posedly are difficult to oversee. When he gets a new player—sometimes before he gets him—Bucky studies him. It usually is & case of simple psychology, NG 5N 4 known as a “ball player's manager.” | and aroused some enmity with news- | when he came to Washington. the pants; others patted on the back. Some must he taken for granted; others a big fuss made over. Chapman had ideas of his own. He wanted to bat in such-and-such a fashion. It was said that when he | was with the Yanks he wasn't allowed a free rein. Harris gave it to him. He gave Ben his head and let him go. Chappie, in less than one full year with Washington, established himself in the minds of many critics as the best center fielder in the history of the Griffith A. C. Ferrell has ideas of his own. Har- ris gives him what amounts to a free rein. Always, instead of command- ing this type to do something, Bucky has sought them out and suggested ideas. It amounts to the same thing but is received differently. Al Simmons had & reputation here and there as a grumpy kind of a guy, but Al joined the ranks of Chapman and Ferrell and others ‘who rate Harris at the top. Simmons hasn't go:. over the way Bucky joined him in his fist fight with Knickerbocker of the Browns yet He can be plenty tough, too, this | Harris, although only once has he really had to get that way. That was when he was managing the Tigers | and Earl Whitehill, in & fit of rage, issued an ultimatum that either him- | self or Outfielder Earl Webb had to get out of the line-up. Harris called & meeting of all the players and countered with an ultimatum to Whitehill. In effect, it was that Earl either pitch that day—with Webb in the outfield—or pack up and leave. The two glared at each other with clenched fists. For a moment it sug- gested & . bare-fist battle. Then ‘Whitey nodded and pitched—and | won. Stan (Continued From Page A-14.) Weaver has won as many games for the Nats. If De S8hong can approxi- mate his performance of yesterday in the future, he still stands an ex- cellent chance of again leading the Washington hurlers in the number of games won. It was Cecil Travis who again proved the spearhead of the Nat of- fensive that contrived to beat Jack Wilson despite the Sox speedballers’ eight strikeouts. Travis broke a 2-2 tie in the sixth inning by leading off with a double, and racing home when Rick Ferrell shot a single to left, One Sox Run Unearned. 'RAVIS it was, however, whose two errors made the going a little tough for De Shong. Only one of the Bos- ton runs was earned, for Oecil tossed away his throw on Higgins’ grounder in the fourth inning, giving Pinky a life. A fluke single by Moe Berg, and an honest-to-goodness blow by Wil- son, sent across the run. That cut the score to 2-1. The Nats had taken the lead in the sec- ond inning on a double by Fred Sing- ton, a walk to Travis, a double by Buddy Myer and an error by Eric Mc- Nair. Except for the All-Star game next ‘Wednesday, the invasion of the Yan- kees will wind up local base ball until late this month. After the three- game Yank set, the Nats will entrain for Philadelphia for a double-header on July 5, and a single game the fol- lowing day. Then routine base ball will stand by for the All-Star affair. OLDSMOBILE WE NEED USED CARS Washingten's Larsest Oldsmobile Dealer L. P. STEUART, INC. .1 ave. N.W. ' Dec. 48 SEMI SPOTS GOALS TODAY AT D. C.NET Lynch, Breese, Seeded Stars, Scheduled for Action on Columbia Courts. HREE quarter-final matches and possibly one semi-final were 1o | send the District of Columbia tennis tournaments into its next-to-last stages at the Columbia Country Club this afternoon, with five | of the eight seeded players still in the running. With Defending Champion Barney Welsh already in the semi-final brackef, awaiting the winner of today's Tony Latona-Tom Mangan duel, the other half of the draw was only a step | behind. Ray Stocklinski and Deane Judd, both unseeded, were to battle early this afternoon for the right to meet Hugh Lynch, second seeded entrant, in a quarter-final match. . Bill Breese. seed- | ed fourth, was to meet Capt. Stan Rob- | inson in the lower quarter of Lynch's half of the draw. If Breese should aucceed in defeating the Army Leech Cup star and Lynch | should take the measure of the winner | | of the Stocklinski-Judd match, it was possible that the survivors would play | their semi-final match late today. Breese was planning to leave the city tomorrow and if necessary, was willing to double up today. He may stay in town if required, however, Decisions Due Sunday. OTH ERWISE, both semi-final| matches will be played tomorrow | | afternoon, Welsh meeting the Latona- Mangan survivor and, barring an up- | set, Lynch meeting Breese or Robinson. | | Doubles semi-finals also are scheduled | for tomorrow, setting the stage for both | | singles and doubles championshipe to | be decided Sunday. By taking two love sets from Dick Gibbes yesterday, Welsh entered the semi-final round with the loss of only four games in four matches, Since tak- ing two 6—2, 6—2 sets from Bob Burnell in the first round, Welsh' has eliminated Doyle Royal, Joe Burnside and Gibbes by love scores. Robinson earned the right to meet Breese today by winning two matches yesterday. After defeating Jack Hoyt, 6—1, 6—4, the young eaptain rallied to turn back Tom Moorhead, 6—8, 6—2, 6—0. Hard Work for Breese. BREE'SE also had to work hard to win, Erwin Niemeyer being only two games away from taking the match when he was leading 4—2 in the last set. Breese put on the pressure in the last four games, however, to win at 6—4, 3—6, 6—4. Tony Latona was the third victor to be pressed before winning, Ricky Willis carrying him to 13—11 before dropping the first set. Latona then won the match with a 6—2 decision. Mangan, his opponent, of this afternoon, took a 6—0, 6—4 decision from Don Surine, George Washington's No. 1 player dur- ing the past season. Lynch entered the quarters by de- | feating Fred Doyle, 6—1, 6—3, while Stocklinski earned the right to meet Judd by eliminating Paul Falconer, 6—3, 6—1. . Te A Fights Last Night By the Associated Press. DETROIT—Jimmy Adamick, 185, Midland, Mich., outpointed Johnny Erjavec, 183, Duluth, Minn. (3). NEW YORK—Paulie Walker, 151, Trenton, N. J., outpointed Teddy Loder, 14613, New York (8). PHILADELPHIA—Tommy Forte, 1173, Philadelphia, knocked out Domesco Seds, 12414, Spain (1:09). PORTLAND, Me.—Paul Junior, 137, Lewiston, outpointed Al Casi- mini, 135, New York (10), (news- paper decision). ADULTS 40:--CHILD 1 Jo 9:30A.M.to11:30P.M. EVERY DAY IN THE MILLION DOLLAR GL Tz A?MVSS\O RS MENT PARK] CRYSTAL WATER SANITARY POOL SUN _TAN BEACH ADJOINING ONE OF THE BEST IN U. S. O HILLTOP GOLFER'S | SKILL 15 WASTED One Over Par, Johnson Bows Before Haas’ Whopping Putts at Oakmont, By the Associated Press. AKMONT, Pa, July 3—Two tall Louisiana tesmmates battled today in the semi- finals for the privilege of de- ciding between them the national in- tercollegiate golf championship. Paul Leslie, dark and reserved, en- countered the surprising Bill Bar- clay of Michigan in the first 36-hole | { match, and slender, smiling Freddie | Haas engaged a fellow Southerner, | Vincent D'Antoni of Tulane. ‘This gave the South a predominance | | that has been duplicated only. once | before in the tournament's history. In 1935 Ed White of Texas beat Charley Yates, Georgia Tech's defend- ing champion, in the semi-finals and toppled Haas for the title, Leslie Has Cake-Walk. LESLIE won the easiest victory of the quarter-finals yesterday, with & 9-and-8 count against John Ho- bart of Iinois, but faced a difficult foe today in the chunky, freckled Barclay. The Wolverine created a small sen- sation by beating Willie Turnesa the first day of match play and yesterday eliminated = Jim Marks, home town favorite. Marks, the tournament's driving champion, was beaten off the | tee regularly by the Michigan three- sport star. Old rivals teed off in the all-| Southern second semi-final. D'Antoni and Haas have played each other three times this Spring and the 19- year-old Tulane swingster has won all. Twice the matches were a pert of team contests between the Green Wave and Louisiana and the other skirmish came in the Southeastern Conference championship. D’'Antoni dropped Haas 1 up in 26 holes, after being 4 up with § to go. Haas a Putting Sensation. | A REMARKABLE streak of of putt- | | ing helped Haas defeat Harvey | Johnson of Georgetown University in | the quarter-finals. 7 and 5. Freddy dropped a 75-footer for a bird, one of 40 for an eagle and one of 60 for & bird, the last one ending the match. Entering the second eighteen 4 down, Johnson played some of the best golf of the tournament, starting the round | with an eagle. He chipped in from 90 yards. But he dropped the next | two holes with poor putting, and once this fault was corrected his woods went bad. In spite of that, he played | the 13 holes of the round in 1 over | par. Haas was 2 under. LA WANT DIAMOND DATES. The Griffmen A. C. of Rosedale ‘wants base ball opponents for the last three Saturdays in July. Phone Adams 5657. In case of thirst, have a carton of canned beer or ale on hand. Easy to carry. Easy to store. !l will make it an East-West fight for Attack Records. A. U. meet at Marquette performances, with three first places | 18. Athletes to make tours of Japan, | Switzerland also will be chosen. | | Towns are not likely to make the trips abroad if they qualify. In my | selections below, I also have left out | | Eulace Peacock of Temple, who had | & recurrence of his injury in the N | C. A, A. meet. Others I have picked | may not compete, although present in- | dications are they will. New York A. C. and Olympic Club the club title. The latter, particu- larly because of Meadows and Sefton, the near-fifteen-feet pole vaulters, is favored. How They Size Up. 'HIS is how they look to me as a result of past performances 100 meters—Sam Stoller, Ben John- son, Mack Robinson. 200 meters — Robinson, Robert Rodenkirchen. 400 meters—John Woodruff, Del- mer Brown, Lorin Benke, George Arnold. 800 meters — Woodruff, Charles Beetham, Elroy Robinson, Ross Bush. 1500 meters—Archie S8an Romani, | Cunningnam, Don Lash, Charles | Fenzke, Gene Venzke. Lou Burns. 10,000 meters—Lash, Elino Pentii, | Louis Zamperini. 3.000 - meter Dickard. Floyd Manning. 110-meter hurdles — Towns, Staley, Fred Pollard. Rates Meadows, Sefton Even. 400-meter hurdles—Robert Osgood, | J. Weierhauser, Earle Vickery. 400-meter relay—Olympic, N. | A. C, New York Curb Exchange. Johnson, steeplechase — Tom Lochner, Harold Roy | Yo | Walker, * A—IS A. A. U. Stars Sports Program For Local Fans TODAY. Base Ball. New York vs. Washington, Grife fith Stadium, 3:15. Tennjs. District tournament, Country Club, 4-7. TOMORROW. Base Ball. New York vs. Washington, Grif- fith Stadium, 3. Tennis. District tournament, Country Club, 4-7. POLOISTS EMBATTLED War and Fauquier-Loudoun Clash Columbia Columbia Today and Next Sunday. The War Department and Faumuiers Loudoun polo teams were to clash this afternoon at 4 o'clock on the Potomac Park field and will meet again on the same turf Sunday at 2, War Department’s line-up: No, 1, Cadet F. W. Bove; 2, Capt. C. H. Reed: 3. Maj. R. A. McClure; 4, Maj, L. L. Martin. CAN'T SHUT HIM OUT. BOULDER, Colo. ().—Dick Kearns, University of Colorado hurdler, is one of the hardest men to shut out in competition in American track an- nals. He has placed in every race he has run during the last two years. At the 1937 Kansas relays, he won the decathlon, DON ELSER GETS JOB. ATCHISON, Kans. (£ —Don Elser, all-round track star and foot ball pleyer at Notre Dame, has beeri ape pointed assistant coach at 8t. Benee diet's College here. 1 Broad jump—Kermit King, Mack Robinson. Johnson Hop, step and jump—Billy Brown. High jump—David Albritton, Mel Ed Burke, Gilbert Cruter (poasible tie). Shotput — Sam Francis, Zaitz, James Reynolds Hammer throw—Irving Folwartshe ny, William Rowe, Anton Kishon Discus throw—Kennetih Carpenter, John Pritchard, Phil Levy. Dimitr{ Washington State, William Sefton 1.600 meter relay—Curb Exchange, Olympic, N. Y. Javelin throw—Alton Terry, Peoples, Lowell Todd. Fifty - six - pound Meadows and | Lepis. (tie), George Varoff.! v C. Pole vault—Earle (Copyright, 1937.) It can be avoided this BEFORE and | AFTER way BEFOREYOU GO TO BED, take a Bromo-Seltzer. While you sieep, it helps AFTER WAKING=take another Bromo-Seltzer. It relieves effects of fae counteract the CAUSES tigue from late hourse of morning-after. leaves ycu keener. Now—that miserable morning-after feeling can be avoided. Take Bromo-Seltzer BEFORE you go to bed ! While you sleep, it settles your upset stomach— soothes overexcited NERVES, and ALKALIZES— relieves excess acidity caused by overindulgence. After you wake up—to relieve the effects of fatigue —another Bromo-Seltzer. You're keener, more alert. At drugstore soda fountains—keep it at home, too! Try Bromo-Seltzer FREE A generous bottle of Bromo-Seltzer FREE! Write Emerson Drug Company, Dept. P-4, Baltimore, Md. adas you fool it FASTER! Bob weight — Louis

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