Savannah daily times. (Savannah, Ga.) 1936-????, June 12, 1936, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6

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PAGE SIX < TV', V M Ito l \ <” * ft X --4«Wl' WAICF &. f*’ R <AX—Max Schmeling ia getting hit sleep now. and doean’t w * nt an X *^ e night of June 18»when he meet* Joe. Louis. Levy’s Hurling And His Mates Support Enables Indians To Win 4 To 6 DUNBAR AND’ETI EN T ™ HOMERS GENIAL • JAKE LEVY’S BEARD TA LK OF THE GAME; RIVto 10 MEET AGAIN TONIU HT - The Savannah Indians Uvu up to their promise last night when took the cocky Jacksonville Tars for the proverbial ride before’ s? paid\ •I’ tendance of over 4,000. Turning on the heat in the mlddl - of the game with the murderer’s- nws of sluggers getting to Braun to tfc-. count for the winning tallies, 4 2'. I Jake Levy, the rotound righthander I, for the Indians, resplendant in His', winning beard, came through with/ colors flying and took the spotlight from the rest of his teammates when he let the Tars down with five’ hits and tacked a good licking oh the fast flying league leaders. The game was a tight pitcher’s bat- - tie through the entire session with Braun starting like a bouse afire blit slowing down in the middle stages of , the game to allow the Indians to come through. Jake Levy, given splen did support by his infield, bore down in the pinches to coast along with victory always within his grasp. Levy Hits Double The Tars started the ball rolling in the second frame when Stratton slammed a triple to right field with Ganzel scoring him on the next play with a single. The Indians tied the score up in the fourth when Lunak was scored on a single by Hilcher, the elongated first sacker. The next stanza provided the fireworks for the night when Taylor walked and Jake Levy followed his battery mate with a clear double. Moore, the speedy short stop for the Indians then hit J E A R L’S ■ E— SANDWICHES— Telephone 6989 We Don’t Believe It! A There is an opinion abroad in the land that kuW " the bonns payment to the ex-soldiers will he frittered away in a fortnight on luxuries of’ ' little permanent value. iWagg': |W?| IV/ \ I UK We on,t believe H. We Isnow the ex-soldier, ttIWELJIjiBr - personally. There are literally hundreds and r y&lr ’ hundreds of him in Sears big family. He is turning forty years of age and is a leveL ? headed business man. No longer is he the ca-re-free lad who, seventeen years ago, HWA wrote world history with a bayonet and punetnated it with hand-grenades. r■ xSBLfeS/* Right now, in middle life, the ex-soldier is ? •’ interested in his family and home. We know W 1 for more and more of them are coming to s Sears to arrange for their bonus investment; k > arranging to purchase radios, electric refrig- erators, washers, stoves, and other lasting comforts for his family. No, the soldier’s - iMMMtbonus will not be “frittered” away. Investigate Seoap’ Plan Bo help conserve this bonus. Sears-Roebuck and Co. ’ a hot one to Ganzel, the Tar man- I ager, which was bobbed, allowing !, Taylor to score. Bennett then forced 1 Moore on second, but amoving Levy I to score for the second tartly of the • inning. The scoring for the game was com , plete after this stanza 'with the ex , ception of homers by Dunbar and Etten with the latten slamming one over the right field bleachers to du plicate a feat which he performed in his first game on tb.e home grounds. Hilcher led the batter’s parade for the Indians when 'he got two out of four to keep his average well above .300. The lanky first sacker was not one bit awed 1 by the strikeout record 7 of Braun, the Tar hurler, and rip a ed out two singles’,, for his night’s flk » k - I • The score,; / / A \C KSONIVILLE ' H PO A Ban ter, ss ~.. 3 fl 0 1 2 B. U 'itz, lb 4 0 0 7 0 Dirnb ir, 11 11 h 0 Mam 211, fit 4 0 0.1 0 Strath >n, if 3 1 2 3 0 Ganzel, 2b \ 2 0 0 1 0 Walker, 2b- 1 0 0 1 0 Early. 4 • • 3 0 110 0 A. Leiti 3b? 3 0 1 0 4 Braun, j’- ,-,?•>• Totals . 4 301 2 5 24 7 SAVANI JAtH A(B R H PO A Moore, ss. 4 4 0 0 3 4 Bennett, 3>b 4 0 0 0 1 Lunak, cf. 4 3 11 Elliott, If. 4 * 0 0 0 0 Etten, rs. |• 4 4 11 2 0 Hilcher, 11 > 4 0 2 11 0 Colbern, 2b 3 0 0 1 4 Taylor, c. J. Levy, p. | 3 1 2 0 0 — s Totals • 32 4 627 10 Score by innings: Jacksonville 010'001 000—2 Savannah 000 120 Olx— 4 Summary: Errors, Bonner, Ganzel, Braun. Ril ns batted (CT: Dunbar, Ganzel, (B( nnett, Etten, Hilcher, Moore. Two* base hits: Early, J. Levy I (2), Stratton. Three-base hit: Strat- I ton. Home runs: Dunbar, Etten. Stolen basei : Early, Colbern. Sacri- FULL A COVERAGE Vft H TRANS- LOCAL BADI ° SPORTS W toA centrau WIRE PRESS Z % INDIANS VS. JACKSONVILLE HERE TONIGHT AT 8:15 LOCAL PRESS GUN CLUB SHOOT HAS FINE SCORES WEEKLY PROGRAM FINDS TWO-WAY TIE FOR FIRST PLACE The traps of the Forest City Gun Club yesterday at the Municipal Air port shooting range, provided the site for some excellent shooting as the members of the club unlimbered their eyes in a shoot which produced some good scores. A tie was in order for the first place honors when Joe Newton and H. L. Thompson finished with 44 out of 50 birds which is good shooting for skeet traps. Starting late in the match, Thompson pulled vp even with New ton to tie the match up on the last run of birds. W. W. Sprague won second place with a two way tie for third honors as T. L. Anderson and J. D. Ivey sharing the honors. The results: Joe Newton 23 21 44 H. L. Thompson 22 22 44 W. W. Sprague ’22 21 43 T. L. Anderson 23 19 42 J. D. Ivey 22 20 42 W. L. Thompson 20 21 41 Henry Soleman 22 19 41 Carter Franklin 20 21 41 Dr. J. F. Chisholm 19 21 40 C. W. Jones 20 20 40 B. O. Sprague 20 19 39 Lee Thompson 17 16 33 J. C. Nash 14 18 32 C. M. Jordan 15 15 30 Elliott Reed, Jr -15 15 30 Women had the right to vote In American before these bacame the United States. The Constitution of New Jersey, framed in 1776, provid ed for woman suffrage. After the U. S. became the land of the free, New Jersey repealed equal rights. flees. Colbern. Double plays: Moore to Hilcher. Left on bases: Jackson ville 3; Savannah 7. Bases on balls: off Braun 2; off J. Levy 1. Struck out: by Braun 9: by J. Levy 8. Wild pitches: Braun. Umpires: Hamomnd and Burnett. Time: 2:00- SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1936 HIS BEST YEAR By Jack Sords r - • -i "Peppy UTTue SAoRTsIb? OF S' 1 . 1 Louis cardialaus, is off To I**"^ ,u ) " V TAB B?st start of Ais aaajor. \ 4 f LeA& J& CARE6K i °ry ..J « ■‘•r '/ -to UP To FROM ( \ \ ; ■ ’ ei&ATAPLACE IM aLZ W/. to-- 'r s .. • TAecaßOialals’ f ' f* 6ATTIAI& ORPFR. L' -• , ,rw ■ W‘ K pUROCABRCAMeTo AF>UsAApV»y / BAT TAIS'/EAR. \\ t aeS tuetLiMToTUt z •300 CLASS L—— —I BASEBALL RESULTS NEW YORK, June 12. (TP)— Player troubles provided handicaps to day for three major league baseball teams. News from Detroit brought word that Manager Mickey Cochrane of the Tigers must undergo an op eration and may be out of action for the rest of the season. Brooklyn’s Dodgers haven't been able to settle the “strike” of Pitch er Van Lingle Mungo—although they’ve told Mungo he must play with Brooklyn or not at all. Young Clyde Castleman is the worry for the New York Giants. Man ager Bill Terry took what sports writers insist was an unnecessarilly cruel revenge on the pitcher Tuesday by keeping him on the mound during the entire game for a 15-roun shel lacking. Terry reputedly was angry because Castleman hasn’t been able to hit his stride this year. Revenge is what the western clubs will be seeking in the American league today. Easterners made a clean sweep of yesterday’s games. Washing ton beat Chicago, 2 to 0; New York defeated Detroit. 10 to 9, Boston beat Chicago, 2 to 0; New York de feated Detroit, 10 to 9, Boston beat St. Louis, 7 to 5, and Philadelphia trimmed Cleveland, 5 to 2- The West fared better in the Na tional league. Chicago beat Boston, 6 to 4, for the Cubs’ eighth in a roy and Cincinnati nosed out Brooklyn, 4 to 3, in a night game. Philadelphia turned in the only eastern triumph, beating St. Louis, 12 to 4. Sally League The Savannah Indians handed a bitter dish to the league leading Jacksonville Tars last night in the Coastal city when they got to the offerings of the Tar’s leading hurler, Braun, to account for the winning score, 4-2. Paced by Jake Levy, the righthander whose feats on the dia mond has the Sally league experts agog, the Indians with their mur derer’s row of heavy sluggers got a lead in the middle stages of the game to hang the pasting onto the Tars. Augusta lost another game to the Columbia Senators when they were shut out 6-0 in an uneventful game. Displaying their usual sloppy baseball the Tigers jnade three errors which cost them the game. The last game of the league brought Macon and Columbus together with the Birds coming out on top 9-3, in what turned out to be a free hitting con test on the part of both teams. Yesterday’s scores: AMERICAN LEAGUE R. H. Detroit 9 10 New York IQ 14 St. Louis 5 9 Boston 7 11 Chicago 0 2 Washington 2 9 Cleveland 2 5 Philadelphia 5 11 NATIONAL LEAGUE R. H. Brooklyn 3 13 Cincinnati 4 12 Boston 4 7 Chicago 6 10 Philadelphia . .....12 13 BEHOLD THE BUSHERS! By WALTER JOHNS ■ • (Central Press.) S < .mk las ME ’ JUIH : <•? U- "F i I PR Buddy Lewis ... youngest basher JOHN (BUDDY) LEWIS WASHINGTON SENATORS Up from Chattanooga of the South em Association to the Washington Senators in a hurry comes John K. (Buddy) Lewis, Jr., who at 19 is probably the youngest busher to make the big league jump in years. Buddy was picked up to plug a thrd-base gap due to, the removal of Cecil Travis to another spot in the infield. During the first two weeks of the present season Buddy. hit around .400. He appears to have the stuff, unusual as it seems, to stick. One Year in Minors The Lewis lad. a left-handed hit ter and a right-handed tosser, was St. Louis 4 13 SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION R. H. Knoxv.lle . 4 13 Nashville 1 6 Knoxville 10 15 Nashville 4 8 Little Rock 4 7 New Orleans 9 10 Atlanta 7 13 Chattanooga 0 4 Birmingham 4 8 Memphis 3 7 SALLY LEAGUE R. H. Savannah '.... 4 -6 Jacksonville 2 5 Columbus 9 10 Macon 3 12 Augusta 0 5 Columbia .'. 6 6 picked off the semi- pro field in his home town, Gastonia, N. C., in Au gust, 1934, and was with Chattanooga until the near-end of the 1935 sea son. He played eight games with the Senators at the fag end of last year, but he made no great name for him self at that time. Moving into training camp this yqear, hwever, Buddy showed the stuff he’s made of and the stuff as sociation fans raved about last year. With Chattanooga he hit .303, sock ing 178 hits, including 40 doubles.) Outside of his term with the Noogans and with the Senators, Buddy spent six weeks traveling with the New York Giants. Smooth and Fast Big league observers say Buddy may be another Ossie Bluege. He has the smoothness and the speed of an Ossie and his hitting should be in or near the .300 class. For a lad only 19, and playing in that kind of company ,he’s doing all right by him self. Buddy is a graduate of the Ameri can Legion sandlot ranks. He is 6 feet 1 inch tall and weighs around 180 pounds. » LA MOTTE’S TRIBE TO TACKLE ‘TARS’ AGAIN TONIGHT TRIO OF PITCHERS READY TO FACE JACKSON. VILLE FOES Hoping to take up where they left off last night, the Savannah In dians will go onto the field tonight determined to hang another pasting on the league leading Jacksonville Tars in a game scheduled for 8:15 at the stadium. A trio of pitchers stand ready for the signal from Bobby Lamotte to take the mound for the Tribe. Either Lowe, Kasky or Gould will share the mound wrok tonight with the choice at this early hour most likely falling on Kasky for the honors. Boasting that they would take the measure of the Tars when they looked upon the home grounds, the Indians more than verified this fact when they took the Floridans to the cleaners last night before a record crowd. Braun, the Tar hurler was powerless to stop the vicious batting attack of the Savages, and had to be content with the short end of the decision. The revamped line up which faced the home town rooters for the first time last night appeared to have its advantages with the infield clicking into fast double plays and the out field snaring the high and hard hit balls to the outer garden. To play the same selection tonight LaMotte is confident that the Jacksonville boys will be out of first place when they leave the stamping grounds of the Indians. Small, unmanned sounding balloons have reached altitudes estimated at approximately 22 miles- 1 jwlLllgP % X ..fr-fcv S W Ww, VW Jrlifrf AMBASSADOR IS FAN—Hirosi Saito, right, Japaneae ambaaaador, aeea ball game in Waahington. With him ia Tiro Takas..,* HOW THEY STAND AMERICAN LEAGUE Yesterday’s Results Philadelphia, 5; Cleveland-, 2. Boston, '7; St. Louis, 5. Washington, 2; Chicago, 0. New York, 10; Detroit, 9. . Team: W L Pct. New York 35 17 .673 Boston 34 21 .618 Detroit 29 26 .527 Cleveland 26 24 .520 Washington 27 26 .509 Chicago 23 26 .469 Philadelphia 17 32 .347 St. Louis 16 35 .314 Today’s Games Detroit at New York. Cleveland at Philadelphia Chicago at Washington St. Louis at Boston Yesterday’s Results Southern Association ’ Knoxville, 4-10; Nashville, 1-4. New Orleans, 9; Little Rock, 4. Atlanta, 7; Chattanooga, 0. Birmingham, 4; Memphis, 3. Team: • W L Pct. Atlanta 40 15 .727 Nashville 37 24 .607 Birmingham 31 27 .534 Chattanooga 25 28 .472 New Orleans 25 28 .472 Little Rock 24 30 .444 Memphis 24 32 .429 Knoxville 18 .40 JlO Today’s Games Birmingham at Atlanta Little Rock at Chattanooga New Orleans at Knoxville Memphis at Nashville STUBBS TEAM WINS OVER JONES CREW HARPER, RYAN AND MELL HIT HOMERS; STEVENS LOSER’S STAR The Stubbs softball team defeated the strong Jones Company aggrega tion yesterday in the Park Extension, 19-9, in a game which turned out to be a free hitting exhibition. Paced by a trio of players who nailed the call for homers, Harper, Ryan and Oy Mell, the Stubbs team took an early lead to push into the lead never to be in danger after the first three innings. Stevens, of the Jones team, got his eye on the ball to cop the batting honors for his team. The Stubbs' team line up was as follows: Harley, c.; McCarthy, lb; Harper, 2b; Womblp. ss.; Whalen, 3b; Lingenfelser, rss.; Hermandetz, rs.; Ryan, cf.; Aldrich, If.; Cy Mell, p. Eleanor Still Queen ~ =7 ' to S? O w j /> - ' / ’... • . ' r i ■ IP I- ’ * z w wk I Eleanor Holm Jarrett An excursion into the movies for several years did not rob Eleanor Holm Jarrett of her champion ship swimming form. She waves to you at Manhattan Beach, N. ¥., after setting a new 200-yard backstroke record, 2:35.8, In the only interview Brigham Young ever gave to a newspaperman (Horace Greeley), he admitted having 15 wives, and explained that some were “old ladies whom he had taken home to cherish and support.” ALL KINDS OF EATS & YOUR FAVORITE DRINK VISIT DUGGER’S Moore Ave. & Bonaventure Road NATIONAL LEAGUE Yesterday’s Results Chicago, 6: Boston, 4. Philadelphia, 13; St. Louis, 4. New York at Pittsburgh, postponed rain. Cincinnati, 4; Brooklyn, 3. Team: W L Pct. St. Louis 32 18 .640 Chicago 28 21 .571 Pittsburgh 29 22 .569 New York 28 22 .560 Cincinnati 25 26 .490 Boston 24 28 .462 Philadelphia 20 33 .377 Brooklyn 19 35 .352 Today’s Games Boston at Chicago Philadelphia at St. Louis New York at Pittsburgh Brooklyn at Cincinnati ■ Yesterday’s Results .» South Atlantic League Columbus, 9; Macon, 3. , Savannah, 4; Jacksonville, 2. t Columbia, 6; Augusta, 0. V Team: W L Pct. Jacksonville 35 17 .673 Columbus 34 19 .642 Macon 25 27 .481 Columbia 24 30 .444# SAVANNAH 22 29 .431 Augusta 17 35 .327 Today’s Games Jacksonville at Savanah (8:15 pm.) Augusta at Columbia. (Only games scheduled). engelTodonate BRAND NEW HOME SMOKIE’S PRESIDENT TO REPEAT RECORD SMASH ING PERFORMANCE ATLANTA, Ga„ June 12 (TP)— Some baseball fan in Chattanooga U going to win a brand new home com pletely furnished the latter part of this summer. President Joe Engel of the Chattanooga Lookouts announced in Atlanta that the last time he gave away a house he broke all league records for attendance at one game: More than 24,000 fans jammed their way into the park. The Doughty president was «o elated over his success that he's go ing to try it again. What’s more, in addition to the house, there’ll be a new automobile in the garage for the lucky fan. Engel says the plan is very suc cessful. To date the attendance rec ord in Chattanooga is 83,000, as com pared with slightly over 100,000 for the whole season last year. In addi club will continue its practice of giv tion tothe free home, the Chattanooga ing away an automobile every Tues day and Thursday they plajy in the home town. WIGHTMAN CUP IS GOAL OF PLAYERS AMERICANS ARE SEEKING SIXTH STRAIGHT TRI UMPH IN ENGLAND LONDON, June 12 (TP)—Uncle Barn’s women tennis players take the courts today to meet the strongest British challenge they have faced in half-a-dozen years. The occasion is the Wightman cup matches. The United States team is trying for it’s sixth straight triumph. Husky Helen Jacobs and little Mrs. Sarah Palfrey Fabyan will shoulder the big burden for the United States. Each will play two singles matches and they will team up for a doubles match. Carolyn Babcock of California will play the other singles match for the United States and will pair with Mrs. John Van Run of Philadelphia in the remaining doubles match. Today’s matches put Miss Jacoba against Kay Stammers and Mrs. Fabyan against Dorothy Rund, with Mrs. Van Ryn and Miss Babcock meeting the British girls, Nancy Lyla and Evelyn Dearman in the doubles. The remaining matches 'will ba played Saturday. June warning: persons wearing blua are more likely to be bitten by mo® quitoes; it attracts them more than any other color. Yellow attracts them the least. fill WITH SHI BRAND OF BEER.. BE THE JUDGE ur rauß own mste to- <7/