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| Base Ball, Ring, Golf "Duckpins, Lacrosse SPORTS SECTION he Sundwy Star. 'Tennis, Turf, & | Soccer | Hockey, Track, quq WASHINGTON, D; SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 28, 1929. West’s Homer Gives Griffs Victory : Eleven Carnival Marks Go at Penn Relay. SAM'S RAP IN9TH BEATS BOSTON, 32 P i Barnes’ Pinch Double Also Is | Factor in Close Verdict Over Red Sox. B few days ago because of a very| decided weakness at bat, Sammy West came back this afternoon to rise to dizzy heights. The young Texan returned in the role of pinch batter when there were two out in the ninth and Stuffy Stewart with a poten- tial tying tally was rosting on first base. Sammy promptly stepped into a fast one, drove the ball into the right- fleld bleachers and the Nationals, seem- ingly a beaten bunch, became 3 to 2 victors over the Red Sox. This homer by West spoiled a fine day for Danny MacFayden, bespectacled Boston hurler, who had baffied the Na- tionals for seven innings and gone through an eighth one fairly well, thanks to sensational support. All told, Man- ager Walter Johnson's charges got but eight safeties and four . but they wasted five of the swats and three of the walks before getting anywhere. Red Barnes Starts It. It was Red Barnes, another pinch hitter, who started MacFayden to_ his downfall, for Barnes grabbed Sam Jones' bat and opened the Nationals' eighth with a double that was converted ‘into a tally when Sam Rice followed with a one-baser. * Phil Todt and Bob Reeves then col- laborated in checking the Washington uprising, but no one came to - Fayden's rescue in the ninth. Then with one out he walked Joe Cronin. Benny Tate forced out Joe and gave way to pinch-runner Stewart. It was then that West settled theissue. Four National pitchers showed -their wares, two going out because of pinch batters and one use the Red Sox threaten- ed to make more trouble in the ninth. Jones opened fire for Washington and in his seven sessions gave up but five safeties. Three of these, however, were made in succession in fourth after one was out and ghve the Red Sox a two-run lead that loomed large until ‘West socked his homer. Braxton disposed of the enemy in order in the eighth and Lloyd Brown got the first two Red Sox to face him in the ninth. Then Reeves singled and Manager Bill Carrigan sent Bob + Barpett in to bat for Todt. Manager Johnson countered by mt:&!mm Fred for Marberry for Brown came right back by replacing Barrett with Doug Taitt, & len-h:‘nd swinger. fired s pair of wide ones :t“’r‘irlbv:}i’m ;!;uc:‘e: e mlke!gl the tter, tt kept Boston on e hndnf three fouls; then made it a Washington tri- throwing & third strike BY JOHN B. KELLER. OSTON, April 27.—Lifted from the Nationals’ line-up only a | - :e ‘offered adwnt:t bew];en;thnr Na- jonals an worl to make third| yankees in Griffith Stadium. As is SNAPPED AS ST. JOHN’S WAS CONQUERING MARYLAND IN LACROSSE base May Bill E: first to Jelinases sud Torrapoms in lef 't of net) dashing around goal to score a lvely battle for the ball. the Old Liners only point. M ARYLAND UNIVERSITY'S hope for a national lacrosse champlonship sank almost to zero yesterday when St. John's College of Annapolis whipped College Park, 5 to 1. A crowd that overflowed the sizeable temporary 'grandstand and half sur: rounded the fleld saw the stalwart Johnnies defeat one of their most formidable rivals for supremscy in a sport that is chasing base ball out of the curriculum of major athletics. | | | was a dominant figure in the triumph, | though he didn't score. He was an art- Only the Navy is conceded a chance to outstrip St. John's Neither has lost a game. Nor will they meet. Maryland may have an opportu- nity to get back into the championship whirl when it tackles the Middies on June 1. John's meets a conqueror. Johnnies Set Pace. Thus far the Johnnies have won six | 5o | consecutive victorles and two of their | Thomeson | victims were among the four teams that | tied for the title last season. They trimmed Rutgers, 9 to 2. They crushed Maryland yesterday. Johns Hopkins, which represented this country in the Olymplcs, already had been trimmed by the Army when the Johnnies knocked off the Cadets, 4 to 3. Thus, of the quartet deadlocked after last season’s memorable struggle, only the Navy remains unconquered. Maryland had won five games and rolled up a total of 61 .points against 2 for enemies when it encountered St. John's. But the Terrapins were found wanting yesterday. The Johnnies were | bigger, faster, handled the ball better, | were smarter strategists and most im- | portant of all they were more accurate | in chucking the pill at the nx-(oozi square netting. ! The Terrapins. had 16 chances to score, only one less than St. John's, and | there was nothing to choose between the abilities of the two goal keepers. Both were inexperienced. | In the two half-ho 1and was superior to its enemy for only | 15 minutes. This was in the latter part of the opening session, which | | ended with the Johnnies leading by 2| to 1. The Terrapins fought like demons | in this stretch and in doing so seemed | to have shot their bolt. They were out- played thereafter. Pool Is Big Factor. Bob Pool, the St. John's first attack, | ful passer. Three times he whipped the to unprotected men, who shot it home. In a fourth instance he was the pivot of & triple pass that resulted in the most sensational goal of the game. Capt. Sam Jones got the pill in midfield, raced to within 20 yards of Hadley to Face Hoyt of Yanks In Tilt at Stadium Here Today OSTON, A 27—For their , an&rrltln American League are just ahead, and cidentally, their last big league , n- entertainment until 17—Washington fans will in these Manager Johnson hopes his club will get much better than the | even break it will need to show a better than 50-50 standing when it returns to its own lot on May 17, Getting above the .500 mark in the next 18 days is & big order for a club THOMAS OF CHISOX PUZZLE T0 INDIANS By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, April 27.—Tommy Thomas turned Cleveland back with five hits today, while his mates combed Joe Shaute for an even dozen, and the ‘White Sox won their first game of the season on home soll, 7 to 1. Cleveland. Chicago. AB.H. AB. o > American League. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. | Washington, §; Beston, 2. Detroit, 1 Louls, 1. | 'REDS AND CARDINALS DIVIDE DOUBLE BILL By the Associated Press. ST. LOUIS, April 27.—8t. Louis and Cincinnati _divided a _double-header today, the Reds driving Bill Doak from the hill to take the first game, 7 to 2, and the Cards retaliating by bunching hits to take the nightcap, 7 to 3. GAME. St. Loujs. Al Douthit.ef. b Cincinnati. Zitzma; for the title. | ur periods Mary- I3 §St. John’s Lacrosse Twelve Jolts Maryland’s Title Hopes the target and then tossed to Pool. Terrapins blocked the way for a shot by this clever Johnnie, so he stopped short and juggled the sphere. Then. | with rapidity that bewildered the | the Terrapins in a spirited battle at|enemy, he whipped the ball to Clem Spring. who caught it and slapped it iin!o the net over his shoulder with a | single _motion. Maryland's lone goal was made by Bill Evans, who has scored more points | than any other player in the country | this season. | Healy at point and Beck at center were Maryland's stars. Line-up and summary: St. John's (3) ) Maryland (1 SRS SINPSON B STAR WTH SPRINTFEAT {Beats Wildermuth to Tie Century Dash Record. Adelman Scores. Relay Carnival was brought to By the Associated Press. FRANKLIN FIELD, Philadelphia, a climax today before a crowd of 40,000 with a successsion of April 27. —The Pennsylvania sensational sprint performances by ne | George Simpson of Ohio State. depending on _whether St. | £ ri Substitutions. Cornbirooke. Goals—Jones, Cross. | Evans. "Bt John's—McLe: Marviand-—Lee for Smink. Spring (2), Thomeson. {PHILS BAT SAVAGELY | By the Associated Press. | BROOKLYN, April 27.—A savage batting attack behind Claude Willough- | by's steady pitching was sufficient to | give the Phillies an easy victory over the Robins here today by a score of to 3. Chuck Klein led the Philadelphia as- sault with a single, a triple and a ?,u AB. o wmoacnese® Bklyn. Fred'k. ef. Glibe: Hi OA. 1 0 3 ’ 3 1 ] 5 0 0 o o o ‘Thom'n, b | 0'Doul, It | Peel. Whi 1 i, Sowrommmsly enwalrrme 4 3 4 4 4 5 4 2 3 ST | concornoerocwm 7 5. ©! conooronuwosonc? 3112117 Totals .33 *Batied for Baneroft in ninth inning {Batied for Heniine in ninth inmi iBatted for Pattison in ninth inning. Philadelphis Brooklyn ©O'Doul, Peel. Whit. Runs—The ney. Klein (2), Lerian, Bissonette, Henline, Dudley. ba n Hurst, Willoughby. b s—Bancroft, Plowers and ughby. Thompson and Hur: ses—Philadelphia, 7; Bre ses ar! off Dudle; oft Struck. out—By "Claik, 3: Willotighby, 2: by Patti; . 5 in 3% innings: off jnnings; off in Y, ley. (Lerian) fok and Prman. hours 10 minutes. PSR \CUBS BEAT PIRATES IN HECTIC CONTEST By the Assoclated Press. Reardon, | of same—3 T0 BEAT ROBINS, 8-3| As his closing salute Simpson equaled the listed world record of 9 seconds !in winning the special 100-yard dash | This was his fourth successive trium- i phant race of the day and his fifth in two days, during which he made a show of the best Eastern sprinters and anchored the Ohio State quartets that ran off with the quarter and half-mile college relay championships. In three successive heats of the 100- vard dash, Simpson was clocked in 10 seconds, 94-5 and finally 93-5 as he sped down the straightway in the i final heat to beat Karl Wildermuth, Georgetown ace, by fully 5 yards in the fastest century ever rug on historic Franklin Field. In between his heats Simpson found time to run the anchor furlong for the victorious Ohio State half-mile relay team. The flashy performances of the trim, dark-haired Buckeye star furnished the outstanding feature of the final day's program, fillled with excitement and frequently sensational feats by more than 3;300 schoolboy and college ath- b Eleven Marks Shattered. Six Penn relay carnival records were shattered today, m a total of 11 jrecord performances of various order in two days, in addition to a number of accomplishments that were just as con- mua even if not of record-breaking ¥ Paavo Nurmi, after barely beating the American 2 -mile record yesterday. had the oid college yell to urge him on in an effort to break the 3-mile mark today, but Paavo, lacking any competition, fell exactly 18 seconds 3 | short of touching his own world record for the distance. He was clocked in 14 minutes 29 1-5 seconds as he lapped all but two of his opponents. Leo Lermond, rugged young Boston A. A. runner, turned in one n(' the best outdoor miles any American has shown in years when he reeled off the distance in 4 minutes, 14 3-5 seconds in a dizzy duel with Orval Martin of Purdue. Martin challenged and passed Lermond on the final lap, but the latter’s closing wcmwnuchxmmhxmue Pred Sturdy, successor Yale's e 4 Simpeon hel) Ohio e Ry iped “!hh create & Tavener. 5. that has been staggering about since | Lind. 2b... the start of the flag campaign. Better | A7t pitching abd better hitting will have | Falk, if.. = to be produced by the Nationals to| attdin théfr objective. These, Johnson | believes, should soon be in evidence; in fact, there already is % marked improve- mept in the work of several of the Na- Critz,2b. ... Walker.rf. Allen.cf 2 Percentare Rice e e [l e e e SWing act al R o'cl 5 opened the fourth with @ tWo- | “'por this first meeting of the year ced & with the world champions, Manager Walter Johhnm Alre.le:" n‘:‘uxl’n‘:lk:d his right-hander, '3 y, for The 70 le‘z( starting hurler. Hadley en- Cubs made it two out of three by win- ning a free-hitting contest from the | Pittsburgh Pirates today, 8 to 7. Sheely- hit a home run over the left- field fence for Pittsburgh. Pittsburgh. B SwrSrnw in 17 minutes 483; seconds. This broke the mark of 11§xl/, hl_:wbul‘ln:eld Irymc‘or:lnll since 1916, 0 other carnival recor the field events. i o Myatt. o Berk. Shaute, Thom: wororcomox! cratananmd (U -1 carbosnund renscccue® Pt £% 3 3 3 s, p.'3 H 52 5 .5 4 . 3 2 1.3 0 1 21 0 1 212 5 € Doal Frankh'se.p Bell.p. > ] i o > A i & doubl L All the Red Sox got oflp‘.lodlwl lnml.hl: t three rounds was MacFayden’s s g!!l:t came with two out in the third, but most Mackmen against the Yankees last sexson, but then he was not in trim he now seems to have. recent effort—that in the Philadel opener last Tuesday—the boy gave a great exhibition and the four days’ rest he b | Prove helpfil-even ht | WOk, center and only a spectacular one-hand 4 drive to’a double. tead sent his teammate to third nding a single off Jones' bare hand. Bluege made a effort for B e Flaggy sviped second ick it up. n Flaggy swi ‘l’nd scored behind Scarrit as Regan | lined a two-bagger to the left-field | i corner. During the next three innings each side put but one man on the runway. Tate drew a pass in the Nationals’ fifth and Flagstead singled in the Red Sox sixth. ‘Washington finally broke into the run column in the eighth, but at the ex- penditure of a vast amount of effort. Two hits, netting three bases, and a pass then were gleaned off MacFayden for a lone tally. Barnes, batting in Jones’ place, opened the attack by dou- bling to left center. Rothrock made & desperate bid for a catch, but the ball it escaped his grasp. Todt's fine stop ept & hit from Harris, but Red reached the far corner. Rice rified a single o n!_r;;m put the run over. n a brilliant Red Sox defense camc to the rescue of MacFayden, who was faltering badly. Goslin lashed a burn- ing grounder toward right, but Todt by and got Rice with a heave to Rhyne. Goslin_ plifered second and Judge strolled. Bluege then shot a liner to- ward left that looked a sure hit when | it left the bat, but up leaped Reeves | for a great catch and the rally was| over. After that, however, came the fire- ‘works, RED SOX THIS YEAR POPULAR IN BOSTON BOSTON, April 27.—Hub fans like the Red Sox this year. The Nationals played before a good crowd yesterday and today more than 12,000, the most sizeable throng the Washingto had seen in the stands in years, turned out: Among those. present was Ernest S. Barnard, president of the American League. The prexy seems to be giving the Eastern clubs a thorough looking over this Spring. | MacFayden's stalling tactics must have captured Goslin’s goat in the sixth. After stepping out of the bat- ters' box repeatedly because the Red Sox hurler delayed his delivery, Goslin ( finally swung to send a feeble roller to | Danny. Joe Cronin picked up Hayes' bat in | the zeventh inning, and sent a long fiv to Plagstead in left center. Joe | finished the contest at second base. Jones did some “comfortable” fielding | in the seventh to retire Reeves, Sam fell as he reached for Bob's grounder. o but made an easy toss to Judge while “sitting. pretty” 1o the. PisADErs Dok bunch. Hadley's pitching rival at the out- set of hostilities in Washington ably will be Waite Hoyt, stella Tight; hander of the New York mound 0011!‘ Washington fans will see & team differing only in the infield from that which won base ball's most eov- eted laurels last season. who was been switc] During the next 18 days the Na-| tionals Will battle desperately to soar | above the 500 mark in winning per- centage for the first time since early last April. champion Yankees and three lunged for a spectacular one-hand grab | ;¢ the Western representatives in the | West Wallops One Marberr: Janes, 5 ning; off B berey. mene per to third base to replace Joe Dugan, and Leo Durocher, & sub- stitute in 1928, has been placed in the short field. Otherwise it's the same walloping And the wallop has been in| evidence this season, even though the | Yankees have set no dizzy pace thus far in winning games. Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig are swinging vicious bats, as usual, while the remainder of the New York line-up has not been partic- ularly weak offensively. Everything ought to have plenty of base ball en- tertainment Sunday. the good pihrsical In k! ainst the has had since may though he is of the néed more steady prob- Yankee Mark Koenig, | shortstop .then, has considered, Washington Four games with the world h each | £ ssommsamsmnSumng ssmssssssese® ool ul oam sanse-~>nlsssssuscessvascse? ol ssesss02200™ ol 200s200s200ssess! 12— =1 ed in—West (2), Rice, Regan developed, proLably much good pitch- | weight ‘nor the stamipa he now pos- | seems to have enough on the ball to | risk an occassional start. tionals’ hurlers. In offensive, however, the punch still is missing. Until it is ing will go to waste. Now that the hurlers who have been doing the starting of games are round- ing into the good form they were ex- season, Johnson may experiment more with those of the piiching staff, who only. It is virtually settled that for the time being Irving Harley, Sam Jones, Fred Marberry and Adolph Liska will constitute the main startin, the left-handed Garland ting a shot at beginning a game every five or six days, but the National chief is likely to take a chance with Lloyd Brown and Bob Burke, his young south- paws, every once.in a while. Although Brown did not perform so | fmpressively when he faced the Ath-| letics after relieving Marberry in Phil- adelphia last Wednl!dl{, he gave a good account of himseif against the | same club in Washington in the second countest of the season. He showed enough while the club was training in tl South, too, to warrant his getiing & thorough . trial in the championship campaign In fact, Manager Johnson then considered making Brown a starter from the beginning of the flag chase, | but the veterans of the staff worked in such fine manner during the latter| back M the reserve group. good and appears strong enough to go | a route. It will be recalled that the | stringbean left-hander in his few starts last sesison. pitched some _excellent games, Then Bob had nelther the | sesses nor did he have the good change of pace he now shows. Burke may not be ready for service as a regular turn artist in the big show, but he certainly That Judge-Myer shift made in the batting order here this afternoon wiil be continued, Manager Johnson savs Against the Red Sox in the Friday scrap, Capt. Joe stung the ball soundlv for the first time this season and the Washington pilot thinks the veteran is about ready to do some consistentiy good socking, while Myer has yet to swing into a good batting stride. 5o Judge was moved up to the fourth po- sition, that his hitting might convert into some runs the clouts that Goslin has been getting regularly from the out- set of the campaign. Some schedule revising has been done by the Nationals. Provision for the playing off of the two Red Sox post- ponements in Washington and the stag- ing of an exhibition contest has been made. May 20, an open date at home, will take care of one of the tilts with Carrigan’s crew. The other will be played as part of a double header on May 22. | On the way West from New York the | | washington outfit will stop over in | | Olean in the Empire State on July 5/ for an engagement with the Brooklyn | club of the National League. | Johnson announced today that Gar- | inni — ! o . Mo randr Hime ol ssmed e s e e iand Braxton, who has yet to start a | game this season, will open fire against the Yankees in New York next Tues- “i’ée providing the * weather becomes mil e L atwood, Cisse Myatt, Reynold: Kai Dits—8hi Home Averill, pected to show at the outset of the | B¢ have been accounted utility material D part of the exhibition series that he de- :Hc cided to stick to them and put Brown | ) Burke, in his relief turns, has looked | i Chicago. in—J, ¥ Cissell, Btolen _bases_Fall Sacrifice Double mm. Thomas, Metzler, aute run—Kamm. Metzler, Kamm, ssell. are vin TIGERS HIT HEAVILY TO DEFEAT BROWNS By the Assoclated Press. DETROIT, April 27.—Jumping onto George Blaeholder and Walter Strelecki for two home runs, iwo triples, four | doubles and nine singles. The Detroit Tigers and ancient George Uhle routed the St. Louis Browns here today, 10 to 1. O'Rourke accounted for the single St. Louis tally with a home run over the left field fence. 8t. Louls. ABH.O.A. Blise. 508 > ] = o > Detroit. 1 ~ A AW %l corsnosroons! (RPN ORI o xy 33 20 24 14 23 00 90 00 024 Totals. .38 10 2 *Batted for st. Louis 070000001 Detroit 00850303210 Runs—O'Rourke, Rice (2), Gehringer (2), Hellmann, Alexander (2), McManus. John: son, Uhle. Error—-Manion. Runs batted in Gehringer, Alexander (3), Johnson (3), Rice. Two-base hits—Manush, Schuble, Al- exander, Kress, Gehringer (2), Manion. Home runs—Alexander, O'Rourke, Johnson. Sacrifice—Johnson. Double play-—Kress to Melillo to Blue. on bases Louis, 9: Detroit, 6. Base on balls—Off Uhls, 1 Struck out--By Uhl i by Strelecki, 2. in 4'5 innings; ings. Hit by pitcher—By Strelecki (Schu- le). Losing pitcher —Biaeholder. Umpires Messrs. Dineen, Nallin and Geisel. Time 1 hour and 42 minute V. M. I. BLANKS VIRGINIA. LEXINGTON, Va., April 27 (#). virginia Military Institute's base ball team shut out Virginia, 4 to 0 here this afternoon. It made the second victory for the cadets over the Cavaliers this season. Virginia vt Cost Blocker. LACROSSE GAMES. St. Johi 5; Maryland, 1. Navy, I {1 Johns Hopkins, 8; Randolph-Macon, 1. Baltimore University, 7; Washington College, 6 (extra period). Army, 4; Ce 2. Union, Penn, 7; Stevens, 3; C. St. Stephens, tgers, 5; Lehigh, 2. e Fresh, 9; Poly Prep, 6. Navy Plebes, 6; Baltimore ~City Braxton seems strictly & wum] l'l‘l:ltlfi, 1. ——cowm o {|in which the Yanks made their blows * | count more. GAMES TODAY. at Chicage. % Detrolt. National League. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. 7. | Pereentase| St. at Cincinnatl, |YANKEES SWAT BALL AND A’S ERRORS AID| PHILADELPHIA, April 27 (®).— Some timely blasts of hitting and four Philadelphia errors gave the Yankees a 9 to 7 victory over the Athletics to- day and evened the series at one game apiece. The battle was a wild hitting affair o > 5l onosooummmossn? New York ABHO.A. Phil Combscf. 5 1 4 0 Bl Koenig.3b. Ruth.If. CECIREEA > Sogourmmm— PO [SEPRIPVAIN 1 Soosusummun =leg PR 2o shaw in sixth (nning. oll in ninth inning. 0200050 L0001320 Runs—Koenig. Ruth, Geh: Lazzerl (3), Durocher, Moo} Hass. Cochrane * ). " Simmo rove. Errors—Durocher, Fofx. Dykes (2), Grove. Runs batted in-—Gebrig (2), Dick:y, Pip- 1 ons (5). Two-base Three-base ons. -Dyk lome ru! Stolen bases—Lazzeri, Durocher. | Simmons. Durocher.” Do and PFoxx, it Philadelphia. 11. 3; off Grove, 1; off Orwol Pipgr . hlyl?;n;! ras, 5 Vnings: off in 0 inni n ba Bases oft ‘Yerkes. 0 to two vt 2l 3 Inhinge. - Kt 57 BiCherRY oll, 2 in 3 innings. 7 pitel o A R inning _pitcher—Moo —Orwoll. . Umpires—Mes 4 (Hal Lllnl piteher- o Grafian and Connoilr, Fim McGowan, Van e e e e e e A it A Ao RSN A i GAMES TOMORROW. | St. Lol [ alls—o : 2; off Yerkes, 1: | Mu Struck | uque. “SHisn 'to Prisen to Critz to Kelly. Lou Umpires—Mesars. Jords, Time of “game—1 hour SECOND GAME. Cincinnati, AB.H.Q.A. 8t. Louis. Zitzm it 4 0 ? [ Boul 11 2 5 High,3b SR -} ooomusseros® B e seusnasell 2| conunmrancnd BT Batled for Dressen 1Batted for Ford in ninth. Ran for Smith In elghth. Cincinnati £ 0001200003 St. Loul 101020013x—7 Bottomley, Hafey aney, - Er- in ninth, T ati, 4; St. Louls, Bases on balls—Off Ash, 2 of E % Btruck out—By Ash. 3; by Haid, 4. Um- Dires—Messrs. Jorda, Kiem and Mager- K Time of game—1 hour and 41 min- BRAVES AGAIN SCORE OVER GIANTS, 5 T0 4 By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, April 27—The Boston | Braves won their second straight over the Giants here today, shading the cian McGraw by 5 to 4 Boston. ABH.OA. New & ABH.OA Wels J.8mith¥ ef. 5 Wguire, per, 1f b Tt e, York. AB.H.OA. h, .8 1 2 8l cocoosaru~tons: A [] 4 1 0 0 Jac 0 1 0 3 P HOHON oA, coresoamne~—NNe or O'Farrell in ninth {nnine. iBatted for Genewich n fifth Inni: 1Batted for g:lhb.n in seve §Batted for nton in ninth Boston .. New York . Runs—J._Smil ! . Smith, Wi \dstrom. Q rawford. ifice hits—Taylor. Maranville. Lindstrom (unassisted). Reese. Terry; Magulre, Maranville and ckson, nd Terry. _Left on W York, §: ‘Genewich, off P Bisler, Ja hages—Ne AB.H.O. 521 crsamamane] comnunnune Souummmunl PTRUPPS. O D h e 2| cocoroonmronnou~ L LTI al onosocsssconousan! 8l ‘Batted ‘for Harg: 1Batted for Hill iRan for Sheely in §Batted for He Batted fol ninth, emsley in ninth, Pussell in ninth. 0221 t1200 Runs—Beck. . Hornsby, (2. Grimm (3), L. Waner, P.” Waner (2), Traynor, Grantham. Sheely. Swetonic. Error ~-Hornsby. Runs batted in—P. Waner Schulte (4), Sheely (3), Wilson, Stephenson., Cuyler, Grantham (2). Two-base hits—L. Waner. Stephenson. Schulte (2). Joi tell. Grimm, Grantham (2). Sheely. Three- hits—Cuyler, Sheely. len base—Beek. Doul Sheely to Swetonic. Left on bases—Chi Pt 31, Bases on halls—off 201008 001037 8 i off Blake, 1 1h T Winni; nnings. none out inning. Wild pitch ng pitcher—Malone. Losing ic. Umpires—Messrs. Moran, ghlin, Time of game— 2 hours and 14 minutes. l RECORDS OF GRIFFMEN l BATTING. petess t ] one® i s9s200cc0ommmmunaANSRARS R 3 H 3 3 H 1 eoowmennis PYSCRC TR PP R Sper ra ooammmmmal® COLLEGE BASE BALL. Manhattan, 3; Catholfe University. Virginia Poly, 6;: North Carolina State, 4. %5 ; Army 5.(11 ington Lehigh, 6 innings). and Lee, 2. Stephenson | (p @ | | ces rson of ]Cfll’nefl hurled the discus 150 feet 3 ;r;ch‘:‘s ht:' dhnlldc: the Tr‘lrl: of 145 feet iches, ma M wmm mu.w e ve Myers, New York Universif { Negro and foot ball star, threw uz Javelin 196 feet 33, 'inches to beat the (Continued on Third Page.) Penn Results d_ dash—_Won by Si « Second, Wildermuth " (Georsetowns, rd, Bowen (Pittsburgh). Time. 0:94 {5ualing world record first'made by D, J. L . AD: secon third. Willlam MeKnift me. 4:143;. rmy), 23 feet iches: second. Wi 5 ), 35 feet" 33, “inches: third. Utieroack (Bitis: bureh), 22' feet inches: 5 jump—Won by Fen Hedges (Prince- Higl ton), 6 feet 1 inch; second, tie - ton, ‘(Georgetown) 'and Lance Lineotny, 8 Shotput—Won by Adel distance. 47 feet ees; (Secrestognl: inches: third, Smith 2V ‘inches; hetien made 57 A W Muckh, (Wisconsin) ) JIn J01g): Second, Rasmus 0 State). 147 fest 414 , Mor= . (Hnverford). 138 feet 4 Jnches " " Javelin_ihro Tatversityl. ¢ 5 new carrival record. former record of feet 2% inchies made by Oberst | Netre Dames in 1924); second, man (Geneva). 189 feet 73, inches: Worden /Cornell), 188 feet' 1 inch: 1o Lee (Pennsylvania), inch, nlt—Won ickard (Pitts- feet 3 irne i ch: third. tie among six 6 inches: Bales (Westchester Nor- e awarded third pl college relay e ionship— by’ Onfo State (Kriss, Strother, Rock- | away and Simpson): second. Yale: third, Syracyse. Time, 1:27 (new carnival record, | former Yecord of. 1:27%. made by Yale in | 192 Uege relay el (Houston, ley and Syracuse; third, Pennsvi- Je. T 0! by Sturdy_(Yale), height, second. Picki at 12 feet i) bel Hal Woh AR ini Letts a second. New York University; third ‘Hampshire; fourth, Princeton.” Time, nterscholastic 2-mile rélay champlonshis Won by Lakewood (Ohio) (Relincer. El- 3 nd Womer): second, Mer- mabyre (Pennayivania) Acsdemy: 'third, n Tnstitute. . Fou Ha e (Dinguid, Hart. ek Roll:- second. Michighn St third, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Time, ile relay—Won by Boston Universits Swarthmore; third, Jabns Hopkins. ile ‘relay—Won by OCity College of Detroit; second. Temple: third, City College of New York. dham: second, e > MaTYiand (only siarters) i nly v A ; 80-yard ‘shuttie burdie W Ammy (Luckett, Lichirie. Piner isconsin; third, Virginia. by Paave Ottey (Me: third, Baker