Evening Star Newspaper, May 16, 1926, Page 85

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SPORTS Part 4—4 Pages WASHINGTON, 10 R0 SUNDAY MORNING, MAY 16, 1926. Bubbling Over Wins Kentucky Derby : Nats Shove Indians Into Second Division BAGENBAGGAGE IS SECOND TO KENTUCKY STABLE MATE Crowd of 70,000 at Louisville Sees Bradley Collect $56,575 as His Entries Run 1-2—Rockman Is Third and Rhinock Fourth, Br the Associated Press May 15.—Bubbling Over carricd the E. R. Bradley OUISVILLE, Ky., colors to victory the fifty-second Kentucky De rl\) at Churchill Downs this afternoon. His stablemate, Bagenbaggage, finished second, making the first time that any stable’s entry had finished one- two after having won and placed in a previous derby. Rockman was third and Rhinock fourth. in a_field of 13 coits. e Bubbling Over's time for the mile nad a quarter was 2:03 4-5, within two-fifths of a second of the derby record set by Old Ro: (hud in 1914, Before the atest throng that ever witnessed the classic of American turidom. the stout-hearted son of North Star I11-Beaming Beauty. raced front in nw first quarter of a mile and stayed there. He finished ngths ahead of his stabiemate, who was three lengths ahead of man The aner_which with the $6.000 for 75 to the master of Idle hve Roc i worth $30.575 to the w made the race worth race w md horse, Hour Farm The Western strongest inv vears, for gage and horses, classed as the parlance, and Rockms animal good as fourth champion 2-vear-ol #terling runner Espino and Dis Jeat in the dus the Kentucky-br Nockman was the only that could stand, the p: the S was third. Pompey was fourth and Rhinock, who came steadily, had moved from elzhth to fifth place. Bubbling Over, having negotiated the mile in 1:3% seconds, opened I wider the gap hetween him and the 1 pack, winning by five lengths. Bag- enbagi « three lengths ahead of Rockn who beat Rhinock out of show money b neck. Pompey ished fifth, Espino sixth, Light rhine seventh, Canter eighth, Blon- din ninth and Display tenth. Recollection, Champ de Mars and verofter, clearly outclassed from tart to finish, ran like platers. Kace Replete With Thrills. In all its glorious history the Ken- tucky Derby has never been so re- plete with thrills, Not only did the Bradley entry run one-two, duplicat- the feat of the Kentucky turf- of 1921, when Behave Yourself and Black Servant won and placed in the foriy-ninth renewal, but the victory marked the fourth time this year that Bradley's horses have finished in the order they did today. Bagenbaggage won the. Louistana Derby, and Boot To Boot, which was ched out of today's race, was econd. Twice at Lexington, once | with Bagenbaggage and Barcolo once wit Boot, the Bradley colors sailed past | the winning post the winners. Today's race marked the third time | an entry has finished in the order the horses did today. Sir Barton and | Billy Kelly, from the stable of Com- | mander J. K. L. Ross, were the first to do it, in 1919, Never was an owner more confident of victory than was E. R. Bradley, aster of Idle Hour Farm, Lexington, ‘Bubbling Over is the best horge r owned.” he said before the And after the race he reiterated the <t in | colts re Kentucky West™" in tu an, ntry Pays Good 0dds. aid sur-| ets and 60 mutual ticket v. 3 the good odds nd place tic 1o show on a 2 pa Rockman paid to she Called to the post 11 took Starter to get them anties of R “They" estimated at 7 up and plunged to the rail by Bubbling Over ground between himself Pompey, +fight charged into early pa iilton iefly our minutes : due to the cetion and Displ 1 the crowd % the colts reared on. Hustled A, Johnson, to _open up the field. 5 crown, ind set the | speed e quarter pole alf length separat- ses. Rockman was Leader Meets Challenge. turn, Pompey e the Bradley hustled away and A as a contende! hallenge when 1" at the three- ek stretch was from the speeding first e the to Round! moved up colt Tk Pompey Rockr Pompey quarter leader. On rame, rou turn and 1 of the h. | Bubhilng g the field of Bage coming Over shoo s u s rounded the | entry had ing. PADDOCK RUNS 100 IN 9.5; OTHER | O INCELES May 15.—Charlic Paddock, spectacular sprinter, staged ] son's comeback here today when he ran the 100-yard dash in Southern Pacific away Johnson a 2 SPOKANE, WASH., May 15 (#).— Albert Jonnson, who on Bubbling Over won today’s Kentucky Derb | was born on a farm near this city, where his family still resides, lHe is racing career on the track ate Fair Grounds here, where his sister, Helen, annually rides in the relay races, a tenth o and. s others. The race was part of the AAU and | h Bubbling Over and Boot To | IARKS ARE BROKEN " i a second off the world record for | EASY VICTOR IN BUBBLING OVER. URF CLASSIC AT LHURCHILL DOWNS YESTERDAY |CUBS DEFEAT PHILS, DRIVING DEAN OUT By the Associated Pres: CHICAGO, Ma; —The Chicago Cubs drove Wayland Dean from the {mound in the seventh inning today and took the first game of their series with the Phillies, without undue dif 6 to 3. Kaufmann pitched airtight ball for Chicago until the seventh, when he weakened lempnr‘nrlh 0.4 0 0 1 ol ol Eribers.25 2 Whisnee 0 Plercet . 0 | Kim'c Dean.p i o {liamss. 1 0 Baechi.p.. 0 0 Totals..30 7 *Batted for Friberg in eighth inning_ +Ran for tstone in cighth inning. 1Batted for Willoughby in elghth inning hiladelphia... 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0. feago...... 1 01 0 0 0 4 0 x—i Runs—Sand. Mokan, Harper. Adams_(2) eatheote (). Hartnett, Kaufmann. Error —Harper. Two-base hite—Adams, _Hart nett, “Munson. Three-base _hit-—Harper Stolen * base—Cooney, Sacrifices—Coones. Heatheote. Mokan. Double plays—Huber to | Friberg to Bentley: Wilson to Cooney. | on bases—Philadelphia, 5: Chicago. 6. Bas | on” halle—Off Dean. 4: 'off Kaufmann, Struck out—By Dean. 3: by Kanfmann. o Dy Diecht, 1, Hite Ot Dean. 12 in gk in: ninge: off Willoughby. nofe ‘in % inning T Bicaht, 1 in 1 A fit by piteher Ufmann (Dean): Wil piteh-—Kauf mann. _Losing ' pitcher—Dean, ' Umpi Mesers, Pirman and Quigley. —2 houre and 2 minutes. 0 0 o With every pr him at nth made it | ht wind was blow- ck into the faces record. three watches caught } second OVER U. S. By the Associated Press 5 ditions w Some of the ruce go to Charle; of Southern Californi: ed the record Paddock’s spectacul At the 90-yard mark I by 8 inches and i desperately. } cinders in the Paddock’s | . University freshman, who | st to leap. s lead- ddock was run- churning E Pad- tape was sald. Club also ran, lifornta was fourth. turned *batk the first thrust -With a card of 158 for the 36- the a For a time it appeared that Von Elm might duplicate Quimet’s feat of 1923 in winning the cup, but Hezlet saved the day for Great Britain after her strongest hopes ir~the event had been out-stroked by the invader. Ouimet also, made a sensational closing bid for the prize with a bril- lian 79 in the afternoon, but an 85 for the morning round earned him no better than-a tle for fifth place with Cyril Tolley. Cross winds which harassed the players produced plenty of high scores, Jesse Guilford, and Watts ny of T« whose les Athlet; colors Paddock ‘chultz of ( hology under was third Institute of 'l LINCOJ Roland Lot sprinter, dock’s w - y distance 1 an exhibition State College t fternoon. Locke was and Dailey of the in meet heve t vaced by Cornhuske; quad, Locke ran the 220 vards in 20 seconds at the Missour meet here recently, fa 5-10 sraska dual | ditions. Bobby Jones, American ama- or by three. | teur champion and ace of ‘the visiting team, likewise was affected, turning in a card éf 167. Under conditions which made any score in the low eighties a difficult achlevement, Von Elm's stroking stood out as one of the most mote. worthy accomplishments of an Ameri- can player in this country. Invading England for the first time, and play- ing over a course which he never saw until vesterday, the Los Angeles man displayed a brand of golf which ex- perts declared was at least six strokes better than his card. His consistency in the face of trying conditions stamped him as one of the most vecord of 20 810 seconds held by Paddock, STANFORD ALTO, Calif. 3 Barnes, pole of the University of Southern California. established a new national intercolleziate record at the Pacific Coast Conference track meet here today by clearing the bar at 13 feet § Several tries at 14 feet failed. PITTSBURGH, May 15 (). —-John Kuck, Emporin Teachers’ Col- lege weight heaver, today smashed the American intercollegfote record for the javelin throw when he sent the spear 214 feet 2 1.3 Inches in the Kansas Conferenco I The previous record was 212 feet 5 inches, set in 1925 by Jemni Myyra at Los Angeles. TADIUM, PALO team, in the estimation of English experts. Scores of the five leaders and of American. Walker Cup players follow: Maj. C. 0. Hezlet. George Von Elm Robert Harrls. > &34 | RRig s COLLEGE LACROSSE. At Bethlehem—Maryland, 7; o’ Jancar . Roland ‘MacKenzie D man SEREE Le- Gunn belng almost undone by the con- | formidable members of the Walker | BRITON, WITH 158, WINS 'LINKS STARS ANDWICH, England, May 15—British ‘linksmen today successfuliy of America’s invading Walker Cup | golf team with a victory by Maj. C. O. Hezlet of the St. George Vase tournament, world famous medal test for amateur players. hole competition the sturdy British veteran staved off the threat of George Von Elm, California member of the American team. who finished in a tic for second place at 161 with Robert Harris, the British amateur champi COLLEGE TRACK MEETS. New Haven—Yale, 79%; Prince- !on. 6514. At Cambridge — Harvard, Dartmouth, 51%. At - Boston—Bost, llege, Holy Crons, 250 " C°1°® At Worcester — Springfield wor Eastern Collegiate A. A .t itle with (‘;8‘ points. At €olumbus—Ohio State, 64 Wisconsin, 53 3-6; Northwestern, 44%4; Chicago, 13. COLLEGE POLO. At Princeton—Princeton, 7; Mary- land Polo Club, 6. | At Chester—Pennsylvania Military College, 11; Yale, 9. 84143 9223 AMERICAN LEAGUE. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. Washington, 6: Cleveland, 4. rmlurlnhu : & Detroll, 0. STANDING OF THE CLUBS. il | local mound corps. Leit | "Time of game | RUETHER TO UTCH RUE Nationals, will i D the season this afternoon a took his lone licking of the campai on the Indians toda Success this afte ‘\\nh the big nghxhandu NATS’ GAMES TO BEGIN AT 3:30 AFTER TODAY Beginning tomorrow, the Na- tionals’ games in Clark Griffith Sta- dium will begin at 3:30 o'clock in- stead of 3, the startin tofore in vogue this season. administrative officials are of the opinion that the later hour will be more pleasing to Washington fans. | Today's engagement, however, | will get under way promptly at 3 | o'clock. INTERNATIONAL I.EAGUE W [l 6 0 Williams Reading ersey City | Jersey City Fithrs: nzmann : and Freitag. Baltimore ! ewark . Warnshaw and McKée 130 8.1 Torp a o 9 Grabowski Smallwood. [ | S¥racuse .. 7 Roberts and Devine. ' Head Miller and Nievergall. Morrow 18 M FIRST GAME." _ . 5 g3 sl g Leverens and Lake: Fauliner, Maley and O'Neil. SECOND GAME | Buffalo i s 9 [ Doyle, Car- : 6 ¥ agreement. ) . Proffitt and Kill AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. H. [ 150 Clarkson : E 16 jiamibro “and Metiter 10 2 “Roettger and [ 8 Columbus Toledo . Biemilier, and Urban Minneapolis St, Paul.. “ Hollingsworth and K Hoftman, eger: v eine and Snyder: Gearin, Sandere, Eddelman and McMenn Indianapolis at Lo count Derby. SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION. FIRST GAME. sville—No game, ac- Chattanoora . Cunningham and’ D. Anderson: Me- Merritt_and Leubbe. SECOND GAME Laughli Chattanooga Atlanta . Jones and Sashville ..., Birmingham . i Al Morris, Oshorne Stewart and Yaryan. 1 - Mackey, 20072 101 ray and Rithi Little Rock New Orleans. 5. 5 ‘o Burke and Whithey' ee’ou and Lingle. 1 NATIONAL LEAGUE. ' YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. Plttsbursh, 2 i Clnelonatly 10 New Yori 8. St. Louis, 12: Boston, 7. Chiicago, 6; Philadelph STANDING OF THE' CLUBS. zton icago Cineinnati Philadelphia Percentage BL Louis Won | New Yark | Washin, 1| Detioit ~119] 91,679, Cinein‘ati —[. .1 2] 5] 2 g EX| A7 31 B9 D670 high, 3. (2|2 Philadelphia =) Cleveland i rooklyn 1. .(—I 2.1 3/ 8 4| 6H7] 01651 At Annapolis—Navy, 14; Onondaga L Chicago.. | 3| 1l—I 11 3176l 11, .116/101.600 Indians, 3. At Swarthmore—Rutgers, 6; Swarth- t hiladelphia — Johns Hopkins, 12; Pennsylvania, 0. —_—— COLLEGE GOLF. At Short_ H|IH N. J SOUTH ATLANTIC I.EAGUE Grebnville." 108, Spartanbui ShRh o Kgusta. 638 cnukme. ‘4l sovmurm LEAGUE. Jacksonville, 5: St. Augusti 3. Albany. 481 M 1. Colua fus. I a: Pittsb'zh | 3| 1) 8i—I..| 21 2 2(13141.480 i T al. 4] f 31 1151131636 New York [..1 41 11.. 2131 81311 Detrolt. . 1781, |I—} 2| 5!131151.464 St Louls | 2| 1] 2] 5| 2i—I..| 1113131433 Boston. [ 21 [ 3.1 11 1—1..[ 81191206 Phil'vhia | 11 2] .1 1| 2I../—] /111161407 St. Touls |. .| 3.} 21 21 3. .|| 8i22/.26 Bodton. . [ 1. 1.1 2 31,1 Bi— 819,296 Loat. . | 0/12113114]1315/1922—|—| e lou.. TP o0l mnnmm—bl:_ omls TODAY. Bos! 71! amu TODAY. it flnd af ‘:mfl. R fi:wafl. VICTORY ON SLAB TODAY | HER, only veteran southpaw slabman possessed by the seek his third successive victory subdued that club and the Browns and ftgures he is in good shape to take The southpaw is pressing Walter Johnson for the leadership of the SEEK SIXTH and his sixth of t Clark Griffith Stadium. Since he gn from the Yankees, the Dutchman rnoon would put Dutch on even terms Although the split bone in his right hand still is gnnoying him, Ruether | declares it does not pain him now as TIMELY TAPPING CLEV] z:,?\ D. AB. Jamieson, i - ——emaREaD: 23029000 1nE 200~0u0o=u=3T o%0xonTrE-= osomas=iomsP » 3 bt gh. w. e Coveleskis, P ORETEE3-) —womBumead H *Batted for Llltxl! in ninth innl #Batted for Uhle in ninth inning. Cleveland 00000202 Washingt, 003060030 Two-base hits—Goslin, Spurgeon Jud Coveleskie. Three-base hlb—\mker fices—dJ. Sewell, Judge, Bluege. Left on h-cu——clflrllmd‘ n Washington, 8. " Basex | on , balls—Of 2 ug Coveleskie, vt cutommy. Chle, Tuloreleskie, i e reaers. Hvant. "Rilebrind * askd Rowland. 'l'llnv of gume—1 hour and 49 minutes. 0—1 \—4, REDS GOINTOLEAD BY BEATING GIANTS Pound Quartet of Pitchers to Win, 11 to 6—Lindstrom Gets Five Hits. By the Associated Press. CINCINNATI., Ohio. May 15.—Cin- cinnati pounded four New York pitch- ers and took the second game of the | series today, 11 to 6. i The victory also put the Reds in| first place, through the defeat of | Brooklyn. | The Giants got away to a nice lead in the first inning, when Southworth hit a home run scoring two men ahead of him. Lindstrom made five hits out of as many times to the plate. Each team made 14 hits, but Cin- cinnati bunched their singles to ad- | vantage. LA § Frisch oh. sthw'h rf Meusel if. Kelly. |b = wroosuoco~o® Cinei Ch'sten If Dressen Roush. Walker, r( -] > | soorrsscnsscsns! Pinelli.ss Harg ve.c. Lucasp.. 1 Donobue'p 1 Scwei-tizanam p. Wieners. McQ'lan.p Terryt.. | sonscoesismmmias | osoommontnzs Total Totals. *Batted for Hartley in eighth inning. tBatted for McQuillan in eighth inning. New York....3 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0— @ Cincinnati .."1 01 0 2 3 0 4 x—11 Runs—Lindstrom (2). Frisch, Southworth, Meusel, Farrell. Christensen, ‘Diessen (3) Roush,’ Pipp. Critz. Havgrave (2). Lu (2). ' Errors—Moore, Dressen. Anl»—lhllv Cri Donohue. _Three-base s—Dressen, W Roush, Home run— thworth. | Stolen bases—Moore. Farrell Sacrifices—Roush. Walker, Dou- - = » H ® Two-base dfd when he performed against the Sislermen last week. Then the Dutch- man got along wonderfully well until the ninth inning, when he was raked | for five of the eight safeties he al- | lowed. | Ruether’s pitching opponent ‘at the | outset of hostilities is expected to be Garland Buckeye, also a flinger of portside persuasion and probably the weightiest moundsiman in captivity. There's plenty of punch in the first half dozen members of the Nationals' 'lme up these Each of the six is banging the ball at a rate better { than .300. Goslin-is setting the pace | with an average of .393, while Judge is low with .314. This sextet, which also includes Bucky Harris, Rice, Me- Neely and Bluege, got all but one of the thirteen safeties registered against Uhle yester Stan Coveleskie can show lots of | other pitchers how to take care of the { flelding end of their game. The vet | dia some lively stepping when he faced the White Sox, then being credited with six assists. While beat. | ing the Tribe in the opening tilt of their series here, he worked well enough to have five assists and a put- out recorded after his name in the score. And Covey shook a mean foot in getting to first base to take Judge's throw that retired Joe Sewell in the fourth inning. Goose Goslin took a deal of punish- ment yesterday. Three of the five Indian shots that came his way hurt the Goose's cracked finger so much that it made him dizzy, but he let nothing get away from him. Bucky Harris is finding it difficult to get rid of the sore knee resulting from a slide scrape suffered several | weeks ago. Just when the wound is | about healed, Bucky manages to smenr| it in some way during a game and | has to bear all the misery of the abrasion again. Sam Rice has been doing much real flelding since shifting from center field to his old station in right. He did a snappy piece of work yester- day when he raced t6 his right to | grab with one hand and hold to a single Summa’s bounding clout ‘in the fifth round. The feat kept at least one base from being added to the hit. Road maps are needed by the right side of the Tribe’s infield. It does not seem able to find first base when the oppostilon is bunting. Three Na- tional bunts were turned into hits while Burns and Spurgeon were run- ning at large. _ Speaker thought that Rice had dashed from third for home in the seventh inning before Bluege's fly to short center was caught. After the ball was heaved to the plate too late to flag Sam, Speaker ordered it thrown to Lutzke on the far corner. This was done, but the umpire could not see it Tris’ wa. There was only one attempt at base stealing in yesterday’s clash. fifth inning Bucky Harris tried to swipe second while Judge was bat. The Sewell boys got Bucky for the third out. Bluege proved a helpful man to mates on bases. He drove in three of the six tallies registered, two with a hit and the other with a sacrifice fly. Goslin knocked two runs home and Rice one. PIED}(O]IT LEAGUE. leigh, 9-2: n-Salem, 3-8. hooint, (. sbury. B hanr. 7 Gm- ! Cuyler in the eighth. imrx In_the | Coos itz to Emmer (o Pipp: Frisch Left_on bases—New York, 10: 5. Bases on balls —Oft Fitzeim: by Wisner. 1: by McNamara, 1 3 Struck out—By _ Fitzsimmon: I:_by Tueas. 1: by Donohue, 1. —Off Fitzsimmons. 5 in 413 injings: Wisner. 3 in 1 inning: off McQuillan. 12 innings; off McNamara. 4 in 1 fhning: off Lucas. 11 in 5 innings: off Donohue, 3 in # inings. Winning pitcher—Donohue. ing pitcher—Wisner. Umpires—Mess Lauzhlin, McCormick and Rigler. Time, hours and 11 minutes. PIRATES’ THREE HITS BEAT ROBINS, 2 T0 0 By the Associated Press. PITTSBURGH, May 15—Bob Me- Graw limited the Pirates to three hits today, but Pittsburgh shut out Brook- iyn. 2 to 0. In the fifth, Wright tripled and scored on McInnis' sacrifice fly. while the other run was a circuit wallop by to Cineinnati, It was McGraw's first defeat of the season. Morrison held the Robins hits. to six = ° Sizamon® 0.A. _ Pitts. AB. 0 Rhyne.2b. Waner'rs. uyler.c Wright. C Few tr2b 3 Whe i Son Do calimromp e Fournier! Grimes.n.. 0 Totals..28 62414 Totals. *Batted for O'Neil in the eighth. tBatted for McGraw in lh!‘ellhth 00000000 0—0 00001001 x—2 Wright. _Error—Cuyler. ‘Wright. Home run—=cuyler. Stolen* base—Traynor. crifice —Motni le pleys—Trasnor to Rhvne to McInnis: Morrison to Wright to MclInnis: Wright to Rbyne to Mclnnis. Left on bases—Brook- Iy, 6: Fistsburen, 2. Eirst base on balle— A MeGraw, 'mrn)(orrlmn 5. Hite—Off McGraw, 3 in i gs: off Grimes, 0 in l inning. ' Loging pitcher—McGraw. Umbpires Nesrs. Rearden. Sweeney and Aoran. Time 'of same 1" Bour aad 30 minutes. R CARDINALS HIT FAR TO ROUT THE BRAVES By the Associated Press. ST. LOUIS, May 15.—The St. Louis Cardinals bunched long range hits in the first and third innings today and ‘won from the-Boston Braves, 12 to 7, in the first game of the series. The visitors’ seven errors also tributed to the, result. ©O0000HIHMS0; comaa: Runs—Cuyler, Three-base hit con- Otamtarmzames Seo~ooa~o? | ommosmmers: Totals. 35 12 27 13 @ caonorimismona: e £ S .;§ % 200 x—12 une—TJohnst, Ish (2). B Biiaes. . Horme 3), Bell b‘ ohnston ey . Thevenow. ich in el(hlh inning. “Bugrus (2), 2). heve 4 ). evenuw 2 n. COVEY OUTPITCHES UHLE IN EARNING 64 VERDICT Champions Usc Bunling Game to Advantage in Nicely Bunching Eight of Their Thirteen Hits. Bluege Proving Handiest With the Flail. yesterday Washington failed to gain an V'V to attain first place in the American League pennant hunt, but the champions kept pace with Babe Ruth & Co. and incidentally gave a very satisfactory exhibition for the benefit of some 10000 cash customers when they recorded a 6-4 victory over the Cleveland Indians on the oc casion of their first appearance here of the season. Mixing a baffling change of pace with his ¢ the spitball—Stanley Coveleski limiting the Redskins to seven and astonishing the popu'ace well as himself by attai | enough two-bagger, although this urprising circums onl_v to the extent that it hoosted his batting average fror | Covey contributions RECORDS OF GRIFFMEN | |iimited to stinging «kit and punching B\TTI\(» however he old boy on {defense was as active as a flea, hop- ing all over the place to assist in the BY DENMAN THOMPSON. Sports Editor. The Star. ITH the Hugmen unraveling the White Sox at kee Stadium ground in its struggle rie Jurned in a gratifying bi fetics, issuing but a stock in trade— of mound wor air of iree ticke 1 real, signific o 111, were surc not prowess, REEEEE o) B ‘Tribesmen Johinson Ruether Marberry Coveleskie Ogden Ferguson Kelley Hadley Morrell Thomas Bush ... By the Associated Press PHILADELPHIA, May Athletics took the first series with Detroit today. 8 to 0. A record crowd of 38,000 saw Lefty | | Grove blank the Tygers, giving them only six widely scattered hits Bishop's triple with the bases full in the third, followed by Cochrane’ homer, gave the Athletics five runs and in the following inninz four more hits gave them another pair of tallies. Detroit. ABH.O. A. _Phila N 41 80 Bishon, 15.—The me of the | Heilm'n £t O'R'rke.3b T, Gloven. w 8] owesmnmi Totals Pnuzdfl{-n T 2] tomrnsszommad 2 morouuommma Runs—Hunnefleld, Gebrig (3)._ Ruth Funnefield, ‘seott. Comba. hree-base hi . Home run —Ruth. Stolen base—unnefield. Sacrificea Lazzéri, Gehriz. Meusel. Left on hasoe Nevork. 8 Chlcago. 3. Byses on balls Off Thomas. 3, Struckc oit—By Pernoclc by Faver, 1. Hite—0ft . 8 in 2 innings {Rone oyit in Srd); off Fhoias. 87in 6 in- ning sing pifcher—Faber. . Umpires— Measrs. Connplly. Nallin and_Ormeby. Time of game—1 ‘sour and 45 minutes. COLLEGE BASE BALL. o A Annapolis—Georgetown, 8; Navy, ‘At Chestertown, Md.—Maryland, 9; Waeshington College, 1. X: (‘r'bml—-Mklllg n, 9; Ilinois, 4. Harvard, 1. At Cambridge—Penn, 2 9; Wes- At Hanover—Dartmouth, leyan, At New Haven—Yale, 3; Cornell, 0. At ‘Chlfllo—\nflhwensm, 8; Pur- ue, 4. At Charlottesville — Quantico Ma- rines, 5: Virginia, 2. At Wake Foml—“lke Forest, 5; N. C. State, 0. Coveleskie normal | healthy hankering for victories, and probably will care little who h vie tims are if he is duplicate his last year's f the league in winning percentage, but if there is one club he craves to beat more than inother it is the Indians, who re- warded his vears of yeoman service |y fastening the stigma of “has. |been on him. Stan would be jus {fied if he indulged in & gloat or two at having been the chief instrument {of shunting the into th second division | Uhle’s Work Is Mediocre. Serving to emphasize Covey's good | work was the rather mediocre ex- hibition given by his hurling rival, George Uhle. This graduate of the | Cleveland sandlots, who in 1923 at | tained stardom and this season has | been tireatening to regain his place | in th after a couple of obscurity, was pounded for ties. Three of these were bunts tap- |ped with sacrificial intentions, but be |cause of exceilent placing and a ce tain lack of co.ordination on the | right-fieid side of the visitors' inne: | defense, went for bingles uel and Peck alone of the home 38,000 WATCH MACKS | suard failed to nelp their sticki i The quantitative leader SH T UT THE TYGERS turned up in the person of Ear Neely, with three | . Judge mate s con {ribution with a lone whack for the same distance, and which was equaliy unproductive, but all the others res istered a brace of hlows, with Blueg doing the most damage, Ossle’s effort with the flail s half of his team’s tallies plateward Griffs Get Under Way. No benefit accrued from McNeely s single, and a pass to Goslin in the opener, as Judge was victimized on strikes, but Uhle was pertly pum- meled in the third, when four hit- netted the Natfonals a trio of tallies Covey had been stowed away when ely beat out a roller to Joe ewell in deep short, and kept on 10 econd on the latter’s wild throw. Harrls whiffed vigorously, but Rice rammed a safety to right that scored Earl. Goslin contributed a wallop down the right field line here that netted two sacks and put Rice o1 - RuneBiehon (%), third, and a_pass to Judge crowded Salloway (2). Grove. Erore—Xeun. the corner. Bluege looked at & coupi son, e L T «;‘1 szr;‘;.eald“uh;ur taking his bat off o oway. Sacri- | his shoulder, but pickled the nex L U T e i | good one for a safety to center tha o, Neun ORourke and Neun: Geb- | ;'n;hed Rice and Goslin, and ; fisker o Taxner 1o Neun t on basee | Judge on third. waere he was lef —8%%5 Phjladelvhia Bases on bal “,;:‘np”k popped f?ul. R nma got no further than th- Mesers. '3} Oviens And’ MoFiarty. initial station on his singles in th of game—1 hour and 40 minute: { second and fifth frames. and Spuw geon was stranded at the far cornd | after leading off in round % wiih YANKS ROUT cHIsox double. but the Redskins got il ;um;:e of Coveleskie in the sixth and | registered twice. With Jamieson di RUTH GETS A HOME Ipo'ed of. Spurgeon was favored wih Covey’s first free ticket. and galloped the remainder of the distance when | Speaker's whack close to first_eludec Bs the Awsociated Press. Judge's dive, and bounded off the NEW YORK, May 15.—The Yankees | boxes past Rice for three bages, made it five straight today by taking | himself then counting on Joe Seiw the Chicago White Sox into camp, 10 | long fly to MeNeels. to 1. in the first game of a series. 7 Herb Pennock held the visitors to Champs Utilize the Bunt. three singles. A Harris died stealing after openin Included in the New Yorkers' 16 | the fifth with a sarfzy. and ;n the hits was a home run by Babe Ruth.|sixth, Judge's double against tha his. fifth of the week, his twelfth of | right field fence, and Bluege's infleld the Spring and his 321st of his major | bingle availed nothing when Ruel hit league career. a bounder to Lutzke that resulted in /Ruth had two singles today as well | Judge being run down on the line. as the homer, which came in the|but the champions amassed another eighth off Thomas with Combs on base. | trio of tallies in the succeeding chap Chiec. ABH 0 A N. Y. ABH 0 4\ ter, when the bunt was utilized 10 lfioslll "(Xh great advantage. MeNeely lined a single to center at the outset, Harris beat out a bunt 1o the right of the box that none of the Indians could field. and the bases were loaded when Rice was credited with a safety on his tap to Uhle, which the pitcher slipped on in fielding., and ferried to Lutzke too late to force McNeely at third. This put it up t. slin, and the Goose came through with a single to right that tallied McNeely and Harris. Judge moved his mates along a notch with a sacri ficial tap and Bluege's far from lo; loft to Speaker, was enough to cash Rice, Spoke's throw being accurate, but with to high a trajectory. This - ended scoring for the Na- tionals, Coveleskie’s surprising double [in the elghth being unsupported, but Speaker's men got to the Pole for a pair of markers in their half of the round when Jamfeson singled to left and scored on Spurgeon’s double, the latter taking an extra base on Rice's fumble of the bounding ball, and counting while Judge was retiring Speaker. Spoke drafted Pat MecNulty and Glenn Myatt for pinch hitting roles in the final frame, when Luke Sewell achieved a safety, but neither was able to deliver. i MEET RECORDS BROKEN A pimte, o T o | AS YALE BEATS TIGERS ler, 10. NEW HAVEN, May 15 (4#.—Sev- At Blnominnnn—ohh State, 10;|eral meet records were broken thig Indiana, 6. afternoon when the lale track team At New Brunswick, N. J.—Rut-|defeated Princeton, 79% 10 553. The gers,’4; Washington and Lee, 3. Elis won nine first places to, six for the At Madison—Wisconsin, 4; Minne- | Tigers. sota, 3. , The feature wad the'pole vaulting g of Sabin W. Carr of Dubuque, Iowa, Yale sophomore, vho. soared over the bar at 13 feet 3 lncnu, a new meet 2 £ TAKES TITLE MEET. 3 ‘fl’ Y 04017 , oy } Qfl;éu $Hien (a).’E‘wml n'g ni" pea base hita ell. O usn- sh 16 %-a.,'.‘"“ VIRGINIA LELGI!’E. oflolk SR b Jfi‘ l WORCESTER, Mass.,, May 15 (). |record. -s-smxngnew College loda;y wen the| Gibson of Princeton hurled the jave- Eastern Intercollegiate Athletic Asso- [ lin 199 feet 113 inches, 10 inches bet- ciation track meet, scoring 48 points | ter than the f v record. Gates of nnlnat 3314 for Vermont, its nearest | Princeton tossed the discus 136 r’u competitor. :!4 inches, also a flew mord

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