Evening Star Newspaper, June 17, 1923, Page 71

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[SPORTS| ~ The Sy Stae, Part 4—4 Pages BEATS SON ON 19TH HOLE “IN MIDDLE ATLANTIC FINAL | Roland Sinks 30-Foot Putt to S;;uare it for Third Time at 18th, Only to Have Parent Drop 25-Footer to Win on Extra Hole. BY W. R. McCALLUM. LBERT R. MacKENZIE oi the Columbia Country Club won lhe’ middle Atlantic golf championship yesterday as the result of a match unique in the links annals of this country. He succeeded Thomas W. Sasscer of the Maryland Country Club as titleholder by defeating his son, Roland R. MacKenzic, 1 up in nineeten holes of as absorbing a round as ever has been contested on the historic course of .the Chevy Chase Club. The final was marked by play of all descriptions—a mediocre first nine holes which ended with the players all even and progressed in a rescendo of brilliancy to a stirring finish, the sixteen-year-old lad— one of the voungest who ever played for the title—holing a thirty-foot putt to square the match with his proud and perspiring parent on the eighteenth hole. “Dad” turned the tables with a vengeance on the extra hole where, with Roland only four inches from the cup, theelder MacKenzie ran down a twenty-five-foot putt to annex the hole and the title. Never was a gallery so evenly di-| after pushing his tee shot to the vided as the throng which followed | Fight. ~Roland also found the rough his “pater et filius" contest. Natu.| [10m the tee and could not get home | in 2. rally, all the kids from the caddies up were pulling for Roland, while the The voungster—true son of hls' y nervy dad—holed a 25-foot downhill veteran golfers sided with the father. Fxperience won in the end, as it usually putt to square the match at the twelfth with a birdie 3. The thir- does uniess youth comes ‘through with | {6enth was halved in 4's. where = Tenii > streak of brilliance, | Albert found the trap to the left Albert pla the lust ten holes of #nd Roland was short of the green the match in one under fours, the last | With his tee shot. Albert won the n@s-in 36, and then was only level h with his {talwart son—truly « chip fourteenth, when s son got into the ball a little fast and skied his Off the old block. The vell that went | 'e¢ shot. The fifteenth halved up when the lad ran down a thirty- |8 45, Roling holing a tri 3-foot- footer on the eighteenth to halve the | € #nd the sixteenth was gnateh sounded like the last inning of “ ball game when the slusging idol haived in 4s. Albert played a sweet midiron shot of tl» home club comes through with the winning wallop. to the seventeenth green, but Roland Yas just outside with o mashie’ and e o he hole was halved in 4, Strai Dad” Steady in the Pinch. down the middle w J"‘"‘“‘“ l:“"::fi)'[\; hole looked as big as a barrelfat the eighteenth, with Roland. to d™” MacKenzie at the nineteenth. j down. Albert’s midiron was on the All lie had to do was fo set up, for |edp the green. while Roland's Rolund’s ball lay only four inches | mashic s inside thirty feet from away, and the chances we thit the hole. Albert putted up to within Albert’s ball. if not exact traisht, | three feet, and Roland, sighting the Mould hit the son's ball and drob in |line from hoth sides of the hole sat i anyway. But the winning putt never {ipe putt to square the match. It was wivered on its line and when it |jn¢ Bt 10 5 Rever Wavering o .‘ul‘t(?r'l st the tin R l.uynrlh sele-linch from the ‘line. Both finalists | ated” his loss of the title by en. ) iien, TEom 5 and the matek circling the paternal shoulders with a ey has hug of congratulation: Dramatic as the final lexucty th they had [started orf threz hours sen drama was the ent | “Roland, ’ of the two MacKenzies through Inia gend, as he usually aia, ~emi-finals and final rounds | it oo nineteanth lopesters had it all figured out “hris-Dunphy and Horace 6. Ch Albert's iron shot was shic shiot of his son. The lad mad ) sallant try for his 3 on the 4 ring of Wilmington would meet rd hole, ang 5 ring ot Wilmi ey O meet an [yard hole, and missed by inche \tacKenzies couldn’t stand the pace But Albert walkgd through Dunphy jing on the far side of the cup | ||I|4- father the hole looked as big as | “the District titlehol to the tune of and 1. while u few yards back of the proverbial barrel, and down went [ {he putt to win the championship. | Roland seenfed as pleased as Mao. him stalked Roland, the son, trim- | i el as el ‘4“{;“1 ing Chickering 1o ihe quecn's taste and has many vears of golf | sy b and 3, missing a few shots, but {uhead of him. And probably. m playing satisfving golf. PR R And then the stage was set for the greatest final of the finest tournament championships. ever held by the Middle Atlantic Golf The cards: 3 Albert R. MacKenzie— Association. There is only one paral- lel for it—the meeting George S, Out . 5435547 442 <. | Roland R. MacKenzie— yon and his son, Seymour Lyon, in{ [OU......45536556 33—z he final for the championship of the | Albert R. MacKenzie— city of Toronto, Canada, last year. In 1444444443678 And at the end the result was the Extra hole—3. same with father victorious, Roland R. MacKenzie— “You're a good lad, and In 4 S 4544433678 golfer, hut you've got to Extra hole—t. papa just the same.” said G Gl he conclusion of that championship, | e rar o atter ind Albert MacKenzie might have DL Labor seneratori 3ald the sume at Chevy Chase yester- | hoth father and son, vietor and san ay. quished, for a golf battle that never Son Squares has been paralleled in this country. | His He referred to golf as the most de as any cratic of zames, and sald We did not EhAL Dt At o 6fs realize its difficulty until he himself tify And golf and took it up a few years ago. e from behind in a times during the r ton, hr Other Flight Winners. down, and three times he N et The second flight went to Richard doun, ared the f p, Havidson of Che > who de- | only el hekupSat ihe feated George P. Lynde of Washing- hole, also T of Wi same the e as when first tee, prog outhit tee, but inside’ the in good come to | corge at | Pres matches Secretary ter the | vy " t Three Times. and plenty of it ds who saw th will t ability ddition. Thr son has & une of the 1o where MacKenzie jion. S and. B _ Karl F. Kellerman sank a twenty- GHpoL e foot putt to win on the nineteenth in Uhie Seixtion na the final of the third flight against A e ana Commander W. W. Smith, while the Shower 1t veethuay . flight nt to Lee Cran- TR e B enda jr.; John W. Childress of Chevy Washinston 5é dnnexed the fifth flight, win- [ bl il { ning from W. M. Kennedy of Colum- e brge bin, and Harry F. Krauss of Ban- kg the end the father vie-|Tockburn won the sixth flight from H. i the minefeenth . hole, | King Cornwell of Columbia. | Where is the critic who said golf| L." S, Barr of Columbia, and J.| 1o satisty thgll Holt Wright of Washington, who had | tied for Tow, net at 5 in the quall- | fying round, disqualified by a rule ‘of the Middle Atlantic Golf Association, which states that any plaver who fails to play through the tournament may not recelve any qualification prize. Both Wright | and Barr defaulted in the first match piay- round. Low net then went to| E. B, English of Columbla with a| card ‘of $5-15—67. and second low | net was won by Admiral J. D. Beuret of | Chevy Chase, with §6-18—68 Horace G.” Chickering of Wilmington won the play-off for the qualifying medal, with a card of 72, against 76 for B. Warren Corkran. grandly A finer around they years d nalists—father erence in nd ehs qualities ers? Or the chap who perslsts t =olf Iy an old man's game? In W ather active outdoor sport could cle be witnessed? ANl Thrills Not in Final The thrills in this greatest of Mid- dle Atlantic tournaments did not ail ome on the last day, however. The hegan early in qualifyinis round, | when_ Chickeri coursa ceord with n 72, followed thres bours ager by 1L Warren ran with the ame scor The old course record went by the hoards five diflerent times during the nedal round. for Tom Moore had a 73 and Guy M. Standifer and Chris | Dunphy had 73s. Scores below 75 were scattered all through the tour- nament. Chickering had three 4s oft for a 69 in one of his matches esterday. while Standifer had a 71 th all putts holed. Such scoring in a tourna- has never been seen ment ubout Washington, or has the| CONSOLATION—F. M. Sweeney. Maryland | zolf ever been of such consistently C. C., defested M. B. Stevinson. Columbia, 1 high order. up in 18 Holes: Samuel Daizell, Chevy Cha: MacKcnzie, the vounger, won the | defested Guy M, Standifer, Colimbia, ¢ and . 5ie wwith & par ¢ when his d4a | N eated Sweeney. 3 firat hole with a nar ¢ when his dad | Figg, tsel dofosted Swooney, & and 3. - pulled his iron second to the TOUSh. | ton_defeated 3. F. Brawner, Columbin, & aud t0la sho! ave won | R, Hart. Columbia, 2 and 1. B cery long tee shot. He | defeated Lynde. 3 and 2. e second hot into a trap. | CONSOLATION—C. A. Fuller, Chevy A\lbert MacKenzie squarcd the match | defeated R. 5. Whaley, Chevy Chase, b The third with & par 4. when |3 W. Brawner, Columbis, defested Merve b S .rt's | Thompson, Chevy Ckaso, 3 and 1. .Final, Holand hooked into g trap. Albert's | TIRTPROR; Chowy CEsse, '3 and recond saot left him only a six-foot | THIRD FLIGHT W, W. Baish, Columbis, putt, which he didn’t have to ncgo- defeated 3. D. Beuret, Chovy Ohase, 4 and 3 iate, Roland getting down in K. E. Kellerman, jr.. Bannockburn, defeated Fowrth ¥y Halvod 35 3% E. P. Porcher, Chevy Chase, 3 and 2, Final, The Summari FIRST FLIGHT, FIRST ROUND—A. R.| MacKenzie, Columbia, defeated C. J. Dunphy, | Columbia, 3 and 1; Roland R. MacKenzie, Co- lumbis, defeated H. G. Chickering, Wilming- ton, 5 and 3. Final 'Albert R. MacKenzis, flefeated Rolaml R. Mackenzie, 1 up in 19 oles. hooked hi: Chase, and 3. ‘Then the freworks began in earnest. Neither player reached the green at the ninth, although Roland was but a few yards short. Albert, away. chipped up eight feet from the hole. Roland chipped up six feet away and left his father a dead stymie. “I'm sorry, dad,” he sald. Albert couldn't putt around it and failed to negotiate it with a mashie. Roland holed and the match was squared. Kellorman defeated Smith, 3 The short fourth was halved in 3s,| " GONSOLATION=F, E." Warsamun, "outuim- Albert sinking an eight-footer after |bia, defeated E. Loftin, Kirkside and 3; .overrunning his approach putt. Ro-|E. B. English, defeated J. W. Turner, Wash: land lost the sixth to become one|jien 1 up. Final, Waggaman defested | down when he overpitched the green : e nd then took three putts. The sixth | nockburn, defess 7. %, Gouiaah JroBen: was halved in 5s, neither played get- |ington, § and 3; C. B, Hatoh, Golumble. an ting home in 2 feated W. . Camp, Chevy Ghas MacKenzie, pere, won the seventh |Final, Crandall defeated Hatch, 3 and 2. to . become up when Roland's|, Comselatolo—. H. Clapp, Chevy Chase, de- Tmasile shot failed to Yeach the groen |eated O. T Smith "Ghewy Chase:'t and he missed a fifteen-footer for @ 4. L Eehnockburn, 3 abd 5 'gg‘ihm?";- \t this hole Albert's tee shot jumped |fastea Glays, 2 i 3. ] a trap, and his second shot also| Fifth Flight—J, W, Childress; Chevy Ohase, jumped 2 trap and ran up on the |defeated A. D, Burr, Indian Spring, 4 kreen. wo down, the “kid" annexed|and 2: W. M. Kennedy, Columbia, defauted The 1oni eighth when the father from | Williim Quiglcy. Ghovy Chase, 2 up. Fisale the trap to the left of the green mé:{n'::l'n?;;raflf'"i“v" 4 and 3, pitched over, and finally was down |sfeuted T W' Meome Baeoien Jhase, in7 IS Avsiemss Columbia, defestea . 'L dea-i;';d ’T‘n;ly. C'ludus.. B REElm——— ght—Harry . Krauss, t burn, defented H. 'C. Train, Golnnbie 3 i 2; H. X. Cornweil, Columbis, defented L. 5. Morey, Washington, 1 wp in 20 holes, Finaie Krauss deforted Gomwall§ and 3. onsolation — Russell Jewell, Washington, defested E. O Kalbfus. Washington, e R. R M. Emmett, Chevy Chase, defeatad L. F. Thiobault, Golumbia, 2 up. ~Final— Jewell defeated Emmett, 5 and 3. Albert Becomes 1 Up. KE' Boti plavers found traps at the| PHILLY CRICKETERS WIN. short tenth and the hole was halved | PHILADELPHIA, - June 16.—The n four. Albert became 1 up at the ) Germantown Cricket Club today de- eventh, faying his third shot dead | feated the Bermuda cricket team by the pin from the top of a bunker ! a score of 134 to 64. {run WASHINGTON, D. C, SUNDAY “Dad” MacKenzie Wins Unique Golf Malch : Wolverines Capture N.C.A.A. Meet SNAPPED AT PLAYGROUNDS TRACK MEET IN STADIUM YESTERDAY Left—Earl Clark, Monroe School—winning the broad jump. Right—Kline of Ross School—breaking tape at finish of 100-Ib. relay race. PICK YALE-HARVARD MEN FOR MEET WITH BRITONS NEW HAVEN. June 16.~-Nine Yale athletes and six Harvard men were chosen tonight to represent Yale and Harvard in the international inter- collegiate track and field meet with Oxford and Cambridge in London in July and for other eight places eleven Yale and ten Harvard athletes will time trials and jump for record Harvard stadium in the ctions were made by Train- s Mack of Yale and Martin of Har- vard, follow: Allen, Burke, Wat- Cutcheon, Hyatt nd Eastman vard; Comnis, Rusnak. Norton, Chapman, Gage. Campbell. Douglas, Hulman and Schlopp of Yale TRIO OF MARKS BROKEN -BY TWO PENN ATHLETES HILADELPHIA, June 16—Harold (Boots) Lever of the University of Pennsylvania, 100-yard intercollegiate champion, broke the sixty-five-yard and the seventy-five Franklin Field. His time for the shorter distance was 6 8-10 seconds, or one-fifth second better than the previous record held by his coach, In the seventy-five-yard dash, Lever covered the distance in 7 5-10 seconds, one-tenth of a second under the old mark. Lawson Robertson. BIG MARATHON RACE GOES TO MICHAELSON BALTIMORE, Md., June 16.—Albert R. Michaelson of the Cygnet Athletic Club, East Port Chester, N. Y., won Maryland's first full-distance mara- thon of twenty-six miles and 385 yards this afternoon. Ten minutes after he crossed the line at city hall, William Kennedy. his team mate, fin- ished second. Harvex Frick was third. Michaelson’s _time was minutes 47 2-5 seconds, ten minutes longer than his time for winning the recent marathon in the Yankees' stadium at New York. The race started at Laurel and was conducted by the Baltimore Cro Country Club and the Young Men's ciation of Baltimore. Michaelson suffered no il effects from the long grind. He maintained a steady gait from start to finish. Kennedy also finished strong, but said the heat affected him somewhat. Harvey Frick was a good third. He was always among the first five, and with Kennedy, figured in a duel which was one of the big features of the run. Kennedy kept on his heels for the first twenty miles and they were far inside the city limits before the veteran Cygnet star succeeded in overtaking him. Victor Glance of the Saginaw, Mich. Y. M. C. A, showed stamina for a twenty-year-old youngster in the closing miles. He captured fourth honors. The Cygnet Club carried off the club laurels when Johp Rosi aknded fifth place. After taking the lead shortly be- yond the fourteen-mile house. Frank Zuna, Millrose Athletic Association, Newark, N. J.. weakened and dropped out at'the twenty-third mile. He complained that his legs had started to stiffen. e YALE ELECTS DOUGLAS. NEW HAVEN, Conn.. June 16— Malcolm Douglas, of Castine, Me.. was elacted captain of the Yale track team for next season tonight. Edward Green, New York city, was chosen manager: William Moody, Chicago. assistant manager; . Ted Shafer, Pottstown. Pa., was chosen hours or nearly remarkable | | next Satur- | | | | | manager of the cross-country team. E 17, 1923 DEFEAT ATHLETES OF 62 SCHOOLS THROUGHOUT U.S. Johns Hopkins, With Only Two Men Entered Ties for Third Place—Brookins Sets World Record for 220-Yard Low Hurdles. By the Assoclated Pres CHICAGO, June 16—Seventeen men from the Univetsity of Mich gan won the championship track and %ield meet of the National Collegiate Athletic Association from a fighting array of picked { men from sixty-two institutions, representing every section of America today. ! The Wolverine stars, with 31 points, far outdistanced the field, oftc | leaving dust in the eyes of competitors with teams twice against her. Leland Stanford, California, folloved Mi o i : i scramble for points with 14%%, taking second position b of her size pitted higar th half poin: The University of Towa and Johys Hopkins tied for third place with 14 markers each. Pennsylvania State College was next with 134 and Ln;lversuy of Hlinois and Mississippi A. and M., ticd sixth with 13 eac in for outhern California had 12. Chicago was next with ing Chicago the teams finished in this order: Kansas State Aggles, So%; Kall.“.‘l.(luf t 11 1-10. Follow Start of the 100-1b. relay race. Photos by Thoner. 'YALE'S TRACK TEAM " OUTPOINTS HARVARD NEW HAVEN, Conn, June 16— | Yale easily defeated Harvard in their thirty-first annual dual track and Ifield meet at Yale field today. Yale scored eleven first places “in the fifteen ev piling up §9% points, while Har gathered a total of 45% points. YVale had eight second | plac while the Crimson was first in four events and second in seven. Three Yale-Harvard dual meet rec- ords were brokes Charlie s track and foot ball star rd, tosséd the {sixteen-pound weight 46 feet, break- ing the dual meet mark of 45 feet inches, which was made by «emoyne of Harvard, at Cambridge, in 404, In E he University of Pennsylvania State 2(‘; Wabash, : otre 1921 Enck of Penn State finishe 71‘10-51'1”"'15‘11,1 B Bowd:v‘i:. third in the half mile after having Jas ate achers, % reviously taken fir lace the tern; 2 Sie o ip e revioals i 1; Kalamazoo State Normal, 4; Mary land, 4; Wisconsin, 3 iami Uni- Texas Aggie: Georgia Tech, 3; Hamline, 3; Washington, Uni- versity, New_'York Univers , Y. M. C. A. College, University of Washingz- Baylor, 1; Nebraska, 1; De- | %; Wesleyan, % Clitie, & Michigan ‘officially ~was credited | State Ags: {with thirty-one points, the fraction | Universit: not being used except to decide places | Seibertin on close scores. {0:219-10 A Hopkins’ Showing a Sarprise. ! _120.YARD HIGH HURDLES (final)=Won by One of the surprises of the meet | Riley, Kansas State Aggies: Leistner, Stan yas the showing made by Johns o 'filingis, fourth: Hubbard, Michigan, Afth ankigs‘ v\l’élch 1wnh only two men Brickman, Chicago, sixth. Time, 0.15 2-10. entered, tied with Towa for third . S place. L. Clarke, individual point S ARD O o oLEs N b Brookins, Iowa: Taylor, Griomell, second: O winner of the competition, who tied | Anderson, Southern Galifornia. third: Leisiner the N. C. A. A. record in the 100-yard 'Stanford, fourth: Frazier. Baylor, ffth: Riley dash, running it in 9.9 seconds, was Kansas State Aggles, sixth. Time, 0.23 610 largely responsible for the showing(a new world record): not allowed: winner of the Baltimore squad. He won the | knocked down one hurdle century and placed second in the 220-| 440.YARD DASH_(final yard dash, for a total of nine points. | Mississippi A, T Booth added another five to 8 | State Normal. second Clarke's markers by winning the|Fitch Tllinois. fourth two-mile run. #ifth; Martz, Southern Califo; Hubbard's win in the broad jump | %% 210 wais the oniy Arst place tehen by | HALF MILE RUN—_Won by Helfrich, Pen. Michigan team. Michigan won the | State; Hattendorf, Michigan, second: Enci ned places in ten of fifteen events by ri: Recse, Texas Afth: Re Stanford was second in_spite of her 155510 (a e failure to take a single first, the Cal- | old record made by Eby ifornians, however, placing men in |1.5725. in 1921). seven contests. Thirty-five schools| ONE.MILE RUN—Won by Enck. Penn Stat placed in the point column. | Robbins, Wabash, second: Brandes, Hamlinc A new world record and_six new | Timer 4.27 marks for the N. C. A A games! TwomIIE RUN—W {came out of the meet. Walter Brock- | Hophine: . Geippen, Northw second ins, star hurdler of the University |Isbell, Michigan, third Chicago of Towa, set a new world record of | Towa, fifth; Tschudy, Wiscon 23.9 seconds for the T 220-yard low ime, 9.92 2-10. hurdles around one turn, betterinz! HIGH JUMP—Won by Poor, Kansae | by three-tenths of a second his world |Smith Michigan: Weekes. Notre Dame: mark of 24.3 seconds. He clinpcd an- | erdon, Now York: McEliven, Michigan; Dict other three-tenths from the bes: time | %on, Chicago, tied for second. Height, € ¢ in negotiating the finals, in 23.6 se h. . 5 f hes. i onds, but the mark will not be recoz- | - BROAD JUMP—Won by Hubbard, Michls: nized, because one of the barriers was ! "‘l";d. '15 a!:hmo'y‘: l s upset. 5 | Southern’ Californi. The natlonal collegiate records | poserd Califo which fell were the broad jump, Pole | 35 fet 3 incher Vault, hammer throw, shot put. half | record: old record made mile run and 220 low hurdles. Legendre of Georgetown). D. Hubbard, Michigan's nesro| SHOTPUT—Won by N. Anders point maker, set a new record of 25| California; Beers. Maryland, second; Keen feet 2 inches in the broad jump, bet- | Texas Aggies, third: Arthur, Stanford. fourth tering by 13 inches the former dis- | Gross, Minnesota, £fth tance made by Le Gendre of George- | follse, sixth. itance, (0, town in 1922 The new N. C. A A |4y 5ope, Washington State, in 1021 mark is within one inch of the world | ™ 4 4 et HAMMER THROW—Won “"\g”‘, (,fl“;.,‘,i O. Gourdin of Harvard, j, HAMMER EHR v o made in 1921. . 2 third: Lmifl»:_wh a;’u‘nmra,r(uu thi S New Pole Vault Mark Tied. Michig th: Palma, 'Penn State, ,\;:: 2 of the Kansas State|Distance, 175 feet 1 inch cu mew 0. A, A e o s scord ). ‘ormer record. nches. Teachers' College, and Brooker of | FRaTSw 5 F3ner, ¥ Ciitornia. Michigan shared honors in setting | predi rrpow won by a new record for the pole vault. The | o DBOGS THRONHA, pair tied at 13 feet, 6 inches above the old mark, established in 1922 by Nor- ond: Arthur, Stanford, third: Southern California, fourth: Gros ris of California and Landowski o Michigan. fth: Frieds. Although falling short of his own feet 4 inches. JAVELIN THROW—Won by Frieds. Ohi intercollegiate record of 151 feet 613 inches in the hammer throw, Fred cago (103 feet 6 inches): Priester, Mississipp: A, and M., second (180 fect 915 inches): Wel el ur Bowdoin set a new record | ghel. Geargia Teoh, third (167 feet 91y inches for the games at 175 feet one inch. which is 13 feet 9 inches better than Schjoll, Minnesota. fuurth (184 feet 8y inches); Hartley, Nebraska, fifth (178 feet 3 s made last vear by Merchant of California. inches: Schildbauer. Iilinois, sixth (176 feet The only track record to fall besides 93, inches). POLE VAULT—Brooker. Michigan, and Me. the 220 hurdles, was the half mile. which was won by Helfftich of Penn Kowan, Kmnsas State Teachers. tied for first State in 1.56 5-10, nine-tenths of a Rogers, Kansas, third; Hammann, Wisconsin: second faster than the mark of I Kirkpatrick. Chicago Y. M. C. A. College, and Mason, Washington, tied for fourth place. Height, 13 feet. Second PRSTOF PP ~ FOR EIGHTH YEAR IN ROW B tain their eighth consecutive victory in the aunual track and field meet of the graded schools, which they won yesterday in the Mount Pleasant stadium, with 40 points. Monroe School ran close at their heels and at times was several points in the lead, but it lacked the final spurt and won second place with 35 points Rivalry between the RAY AND DRISCOLL i et o "SCORE IN ONTARIO | 120,500k 2% iare it o ome. b the nteime ‘i the fudge: | announced the summaries before a yelling mass of youngsters aiter thirty minutes of close figuring. ) Other scores were as_follows: West, 19: Powell, 9; Force, 8; E. V. Brown, 8; Carberry. §: 5; Jackson, 4; Madison, 3: Pyle, 3. Two boys displayed ares that fairly shone. Earl Clark of Monroe School seemed determined to place his team in the lead. Earl scored 10 points in the unlimited class, win- ning two first places, one in broad | jump and the other in the 100-vard | dash. He aiso ran on the winning | relay team that copped first place | | The Summnries. 100-YARD DASH (final Johns Hopkins; Tykle, Purd man. Michigan, third: Brooki: Anderwert, Washington Campbell, " Stanford. sixth, (ties national C. A A 220-YARD DASH—Won by Wilson, Towa s Hopkins, second; Erwin, Kansas erwert, Washington Wittman, Michigan, fft Wesleyan University, sixth. Time, ts, ard the javelin throw, C. H. Storrs ale set a new mark of 181 feet 014 inches. The old dual record was feet 1114 inch made by Green- e of Harvard last vear. C. C. Carpenter of Harvard won the discus| row, with @ mark of 135 feet. The old record was 124 feet 8% inches made hy Jo n of Yale iast year. The meet was run off under ideal weather conditions, before ahout 2,000 pectators The Summaries. 100.-YARD DASH—Won by Comins, Rusnak, Yale, second: lnc{e. Yale, | Time, 0.10. 220-YARD DASH—Won by Rusnak, Yale: Gellfuss. Yale, second; Chapin, Harvard, third, Time, 0.21 3.5 | 120-YARD HURDLES—Won | Yale: Millikan, Yals, second; third. Time, 0.15 3. 220-YARD HURDLES—Won Yale;: Hulman, Yale, second Harvard, third, Time, 0,24 2.5 440-YARD RUN—Won by Chapm: Bage, Yale, “second; Geilfuss, Yals, Time. 0.49 4.5 HALF.MILE RUN—Won by Campbell, Yale; Burke, Harvard, second; Roddy, ¥ale, third, Time, 1.55. ONE.MILE RUN—Won by Douglas, ¥ Burke, Harvard, second; Crouch, ¥ale, thi Time, '4.23. TWO.MILE RUN—Won by Cutcheon, Har- vard; Lutz, Harvard, second; Tracy, Yale, third, Time, 9.56 4.5 HIGH JUMP—Won by Hyatt, Harvard, (height, 5 feet 10 inches): Morse, Harvard: Gerauld, Harvard: Phillips, Harvard, and Iis the Associated Press Reeves,' Yale, tied for second place (height | not given). EW YORK, June 16—Charles Paddock, champion sprinter, who returned from Europe yesterday after having competed in an _ intercollegiate track meet in Paris in defiance of an Amateur Ath-| " 5p04n TuMp_won by Comins, Yale, dis- letic Union ruling, declared today that he felt his disqualification by the ';lv';oe,nfl,:‘:‘e“g;4 mchfig:'cn‘g:e! xm.’m. union was unjust and that he expected to be restored to good standing. | {hira °82 Teet 10imen. "ohei Goodwine, Yale, | “I1,- however. 1 have automatically disqualified myself as an amateur | SHOTPUT—Won by Eastman, Harvard (dis- within the jurisdiction of the A. A. U, by participating in an inter- tance, 46 fest. making o new dusl Tecord: the ; national intercollegiate track and field meet abroad” said Paddock, “T {35 iecok, %as 45 fegt 91t inches, made by Xo am prepared to turn in my A. A. U. registration card and avoid A U. i nn'fv"id;d’m’v‘}’((d'fi'"f' 41 feot competition in the future.” 41 feot 10 inches). v third (distance, | HAMMER THROW—Won by Earl, (distance, 139 feet); Cruikshank, Yale, seo- end (137 feet 6 i Marshall, Harverd, third (135 feet 10 inches). JAVELIN THROW—Won by Storrs, Yale | distance, 180 feet 10'§ inches, breaking the ex- | |isting dual record of 161 feet 11ty inches, i made by Greeniige, Harvard, at Cambridge. y 18, 1922, Kernan, Harvard, second, 175 | feet 2 inches; Bench, Yale, third, 170 feet 8 inches. DISCUS THROW—Won by Carpenter, Har ward, distance, 135 feet: Steffanson, Yale, sec- ond,' 127 feet 3% inches: Miller, Harvard, third, 126 feet 10 inches, POLE VAULT—Won _ by Scholpp, height, 12 feet: D. D. Reiddy, Harvard, ond, 11 feet; Freidman and Martindals. Har. vard, and Carpenter and Locke, Yale, tied for third place at 10 feet 6 inches. CHILL TO UMPIRE IN A. A. CHICAGO, June 16.—Ollie Chill has been added to the staff of umpires of the American Association, President Thomas J. Hickey announced. Chill officiated in the American League for several year: Telford, Yale; third. Johns - by Hulman, Hart, Yale, by Durant, Thayer, Yate: third. PADDOCK PLANS TO TRY FOR U. S. OLYMPIC TEAM Lieb, Notre and M., sec- N. Anderson, Minnesota stance, 143 S i “I certainly hope American Olympic Paddock added. “If T run well enough to make it. and the A. A. U. offers opposition to my selection be- cause of the fact that I competed in the meet at Paris, I can only look for support from the University of Cali- fornia, the National Collegate Ath- letic Association. of which it is a member; the National Amateur Ath- letic Federation and, perhaps, the Southern Pacific Association of the A A U “I believe, however, that the Amer- ican Olympic committee will give me a full and fair deal. because it is composed 0f sportsmen who would not sanction anything savoring of un- Just treatment. “I do not expect to take an whatsoever in the case. which seems to me to be simple enough. 1 com- peted in the meet at Paris as a rep- resentative of the University of Southern California_with the full permission of its athletic authorities The meet was confined to college men. 1t had the approval of the N. C. A. A “I was misquoted in Paris In this connection. I was made to say that the N. C. A. A. had sanctioned the Paris meet, and that the N. C. A. A. was a_member of the International Students’ Assoclation. That was er- roneous. I said that:the meet had been ‘approved’ by the N. C. A. A. On the other hand, the International Students’ Assoclation is anxious to become affiliated with the N. C. A. A., and probably will enter into neg tiations within a short time.” Officials of the Amateur Union had no comment today ta make upon Paddock’s statement. No official action has as vet been taken in his case. It was pointed out, although it was considered that he had automat- ically disqualified himself within A. A. U, jurisdiction by disregarding the ban on forelgn competition this years of American athletes. Paddock plans to remain in the east for some time. to try for the team next vear.” Yale vard world records today on Another world record an hour later. when Larry Brown, captain of the 1922 Pennsylvania track team, ran the 500 meters in 1.38-10. The former mark was 1.5 5-10, made by Svend Lundgren of Stock- holm, Sweden, in 1922. The previous record for 75 yards was held by Howard Drew of Califor- nia. Robertson's record has stood for fifteen years. Lever ran with Kehoe of the En- terprise A. C., Philadelphia; Shattuck and McHugh of the Pennsylvania team. ‘Shattuck finished second and Kehoe third. Louis Goldsmith, A. A. U. represen- tative in the middle Atlantic district, whp was In charge after verifying the times announced that they would be presented to the A. A. U. for official approval. The race was run’ after the end of the fourth inning of the Pennsylva- nia-Lafayette college base ball game. STATISTICS OF MAJORS NATIONAL LEAGUE. El T ohen, OY athletes from Ross School fought every inch of the way to a Cook. 13: Thomso Pe irook body. 14: ERIE BEACH, Ontario, June 16 Joie Ray, in the one-mile run, and Joe Driscoll, in the quarter-mile run, were the only out-of-town stars to take first places in the annual out- door track meet of the Buffalo police department today at the Fort Erie Beach stadium. Big handicaps in several events gave most of the places to local high school athletes. Ray did not have competition after the half-mile mark, when he took the lead from Ray Watson of the Chicaxo A. C. with Walter Higgins of the New York A. C. running third, the order in which they finished, Ray 50 yards in the lead. Ray's time was 4 minutes 223-5 seconds. .Driscoll's time for the quarter mile was 53 seconds. Seventy-five-yard handicaps to a large field in the 1.000-yard run were to much for Earl Eby. Ilinois A. C.:| Mike Devanney, New York A. C., and Jack Sellers, New York 4. C., all run- ning from seratch, to overcome. The first three places were taken by local high school athletes. The Boston A. A. relay team, with Dudley, Driscoll, Kirley and Hann, won the intercity medley race, defeat- ing Chicago, for whom Watson, Ray, Higgins and Connolly ran. SMITH SENDS ENTRY FOR AMERICAN OPEN NEW YORK, June 16.—The entry of MacDonald Smith of San Francis- co, who finished third in the British open champlonship at Troon, has been received for the American open title event, to be held July 9 to 13 at Inwood. Long Island. Another Pacific_coast star entered is Abe Espinosa, Oakland, Calif. pro-| ppoAD JUMP—Won by E, Clar fessional. School: second, Ruppert, Ross School third, e iis ago, 7; Brooklyn, Two noted amateurs also have filed | Eiwards. Gage. Distance, 18 feet 11 inches R 3. B, Laais, 4. e vy, 1+ Fhiladelphia, 1. Bobby Jones of Atlanta | 100-YARD DASH—Won b Olark. Mor- Boston, 9: Detrsit, L 2 thelr cntries, | 1 E. Clncinnati, 9: New York, 1i and Rudy RKnepper of Sioux Cily.[ros: second, Rupport, Ross School; third, E. eland, 8; Philadeigbia, 8. " 8 Jeuls. 6, Bostan, b dON& . wtngm. Monrep, Time, 0.1 3-6, HIGH JUMP—Won by Sweet, West: second Phelps, Peabody: third, Wood,' Carbery. Dis- 0P SKIP AND JUMP—Won by A. Davis, Peabody; second, Wingate, Monroo: third Roeschinub, Ross. Distance, 25 feet 9 inches 880-YARD RELAY—Won by Monros (Win- gato, Highficld. Salkeld and E. Clark); second Ross; third, Peabody. 115-POUND CLASS BROAD JUMP—Won by Triano, Cosk; se ond, Tucker, Ross: third. G. Taylor, Peabods. Distance, 16 fret 91y inches. 70-YARD DASH—Won by Triano. Cook; seo- ond, Dryee, E. V. Brown; third, Sweeney, Ca bery, Time. 0.09, HiGH JUMP—Won by McGraw. E. V. Brown: second, Richardson, Ross: third, Col- lins. Brookland. Distance. 5 feot & inches. 440-YARD RELAY—Won by Powell (Swee- ney, Olivett, Dom Dara and Lipscomb) i second. Carbery; third, Ross. OB, SKIP' AND JUMP—Won by Connor West: second, Markam, Force; third, Richard- son, Ross. in the 880-vard run. It was Barl lightning start in the event gave his running mates a wide lead Triano also radiated ability. He scored 10 points for Cook School in the 115-pound class. winning first in the broad jump and 70-yard dash. Happy Hardell, coach of Tech track team, who was starter n yes- terday's méet, announced that Clark will join the Manual Trainers next vear. Hardell was gleeful over the young athlete’s performance and probably intends to put a dent in Central's hope for next vear's meet through the acquisition of Clark The schoolboy, by the way, runs his races barefooted. Ross School uncorked a surpris when it won the quarter-mile relay in the 100-pound class. It was this avent and Allen's victory In the high jump that placed Monroe in a doubt- ful position. A scare was thrown in_the ranks of the Ross followers When the judges first announeccd that Monroe had won, with Ross sec- ond. Several spectators questioned the scores and after a recount it was discovered that Ross was the winner. The mistake was made through a typographical error on one of the entry blanks. The Summaries. UNLIMITED CLASS. 100-POUND CLASS. HIGH JUMP—Won by Allen, Ross; socond Caparatti, Carbery; third, Rutley, Tenley- | Height, 4 feet 10 mgrs. 60.-YARD DASH—Won by Jones, Force: sec- ond. Elorence, Jackson; third, Pocalls, Jack- | son. Time, 0.074.5. QUARTER-MILE RELAY—Won by Ross (Allen, Vermillion, Leonardo and Kline); sec- ond, West; third, Peabods HOP. SKIP AND JUMP—Won by Wolfe. Brooklind: second, Kline. Ross: third, Ven: ning, Ross. Distance, 38 feet 11 inohes: 85-POUND CLASS. 50-YARD DASH—Won by Souders, Thomson? second, MoNally, Cook; third, Quinn, Peabody. Time, 0,08 4.5. HIGH JUMP—Won by Lang, Mouroe: sec- ond, Milans, Ross: third, Clark, Monroe, Height, 4 feet 10 inches. RUNNING BROAD JUMP—Won by T, Clark, Monroe: second, Coombs, Powell; third, Clow. Peabody. Distance, 15 feet 8 inches. 360.YARD RELAY—Won by Monros (T: Clark, Garmer, Harris and Wolf); second, Pyle; third, Peabody. HOP SKIP AND JUMP—Won by Wolfe. Monroe: _second, Shechan. Madison: third, Coombs, Powell, Distance, 31 feci § inces. Tji0x meN| ‘| 1/—| 8j18(37: | 3| 1) 1] 7I—14157.278 194/24/26/37/87 —1—| GAMES TOMORROW, Phile. at Chicag: Brooklyn at Gincin. N. Y. at Bt. Lous. Boston at Pittsburgh, RESULTS OF YESTERDAY'S GAMES. 3| 4 i 3| 5| 2 Games lost....[19/21) GAMES TODAY, t Chicego. Broskivn st Ofacin. N. Y. at 8t. Louis. GAMES TODAY, GAMES TOMORROW. Shifrad Groveinna. Detroit at New York. Bt. Louis at Boston. Monroe 'RESULTS OF YESTERDAY'S GAMES. ]

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