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Base Ball, Boxing Part 5—4 Pages SPORTS SECTION The Sundy St Bowling and Golf WASHINGTON, D. C, SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 19, 1931. Grove’s Fine Hurling Doesn’t Stop Nats : National Decathlon Champion Beaten CHARLES FINSHES FANS TEN, BUT A'S ARE LICKED, 210 Fielding Mix-up i Tells — Marberry Whiffs Simmons in Pinch. BY JOHN B. KELLER. O meant a ball game for the Na- tionals. When with two out in the fourth inning, Joe Cronin on third base and the home side and the Athletics tied at 1-all Ossie Bluege put up a puny fly to short right it looked as though the inning was over. 3 Bishop, Mack second-sacker, raced back to get under the fall- ing sphere, but just as it landed in his hands Miller, the right fielder, bumped him, the ball fell safely to give Bluege a double that tallied Cronin and that proved the ball game. The contest ended with the Nation- als on the good end of a 2-to-1 count. ‘That nudge was sufficlent to give the Johnson band a three-out-of-four count Bishop’s shoulder by Bing fire place with the Yankees, Indians and Browns. Right now the Nationals figure beat- | ing the A’s means about twice as much | s» . ‘The game yesterday was as | full of thrills for the 17,000 at hand as | contests, with the | d threatening to the in the fourth. opened seventh with a triple, stuck at third as Bluege was thrown out, then watched Spencer and Marberry fan. Sam Rice hit for three bases with one out in_the elfihth but Heinie Manush whiffed and Cronin grounded out. Marberry Stops Simmons. ‘The tionals show no pitching consistently good as Grovu but Mar- berry ed a hill feat in the seventh that just about saved the day for the home side. Jones, plainly tir- ing at that time, had been reached for & dnzle by Grove after one was out, then hit Bishop on the foot. The sad one chucked two wide ones to Mule }{1;! s0 Marberry was hustled to the slab. Fred's start was not auspicious, for | with two throws he completed the pass to Haas, filling the bases. He followed with two wide of flz plate when Mickey Cochrane came then rallied to get | t\w strikes belore the batter hoisted | Y Harry Rice in such short center | o thn Grove x no chance to score | Ka: after cal Up_came the slugging Al Simmons and Marberry buckled down to work. pitched far outside. Then two more fouls, Marberry speeding the pitches end Simmons swinging from his heels each time. inside and Simmons swung for a third strike. A single strike-out that meant | more than all of Grove's 10. Jones kept the Athletics’ hits scat- | H: tered cutside the third inning and | g might not have been scored on then | had Cronin not erred. There were two out when Haas singled and Cochrane ’ walked. Simmons rified & grounder to, the left of second base, but the Wash- | ington shortstop hustied back for a | flashy stop that held the blow to a single only good enough to advance | Haas to third. | Scores as Cronin Errs. But Joe thought he had a chance (0 get Cochrane going into second and chucked in the general direction of that bag. The wild throw sent the ball into | the infield and Haas continued home, | getting there just before a throw from Joe Judge, who had retrieved the | sphere, reached Spencer. put up an easy one for Myer. It was a pass to Manush at the out- set of the fourth inning that paved the | way to the Nationals’ scoring. Cronin | Xcufled with his triple, a loft over | Haas® that landed against the ; bleacher wall back of center. Judge's| best was a hoist to Simmons in short left, and Cronin had to stick at third | Tauseh after the B by Miller when Blucge looped catch, but that bumping of of the day. ‘The A’s threatened in the ninth, ‘which Boley started by walking to first. He was forced out when Grove at-| tempted to sacrifice, but there were two on as Bishop's der took an odd | , hop just before it got to Cronin, who was set to start a side-retiring double play, and went on to left for a single. Haas, though, put up a foul to Bluege, #nd the threat was ended as Sam Rice got under Cochrane’s left. With Foxx again out, Connie Mack | changed his batting order, vu!tlnl Miller ahead of Todt. Each was up Jour times with Miller getting a single and Todt nothing. Pirst straw hat of the season W in Fourth | yotsH E." Ri f. NE little nudge of Max|{n Miller in the right field of X Griffith Stadium yesterday bu ll—Ofl G) | By the Associated Press. Then a pitch high and |} ‘Then Miller | by 0 nm' t got him across with the big |2 sunnssnssy P —— monooocen? soscooosss! jones. p. Marberry, b, Totals . fhore by innings: elphia 01 00 2 Runs batted in—Cronin, o hits—H. Rice, Eluege. in, H.'Rice, E. Rice! hingio T M b U S Jones, mny, 1in in< Jones (Bishop). Y Umpires— s Messrs. Guthrie and O Ramess Bours and"1 mimite: et el REI] SOX [}UNUUER YANKEES IN T5TH Moore’s Fine Pinch Pitching After Gaston Fails Is Telling Factor. EW YORK, April 18.—Some fine rellef pitching by Wilcy Moore enabled the Boston Red Sox to win their first game of the | season today, defeating the New York Yankees, 5 to 4, in n 15 -inning duel. itched !hutaul ball, three hits in nine innings. k’s double and Earl Webb's single pushed over the winning |S73% |run off Roy Sherid, route for the Yanks. Charley Berry | gave the Sox a 4-4 tie with a home Tun in_the ninth. ‘The Yankees scored all their runs ofl sixth inning, Lary's in the first two. New York. ABHOA | onbunnbona PSR -1 oaanaa.e oMM owosuorons’ 0. [] 5 1 12 4 1 5 7 5 [ 5 0 o o s =l -oa-o—.-um-oeu? 375 | serles today, 7 Home ' Tuns —Lar Siiver. a;cnflce;’—&nld @, Doudle nh" g8 bru—)lr' an B sorer u Winn Van Camp, pliche flaz, SRR ven Time 'of" same—3’ Bours ROOKIE BIG FACTOR IN TRIBE’S TRIUMPH Single as White Sox Are Defeated, 11 to 2. April 18 (#).—Led by | Joe Vosmik, recruit outfielder, who 8ot | a triple, three doubles and a single in | five times at bat, the Indians ded | out a 11-to-2 victory today over the | Chicago White Sox. The win gave the Tribe three ot uu series’ four games. > i ol commmmenonsi 2| cconmummanud) Harderp. . 2l e rnnnou *Batted for Moore in the ninth. 0 l’ ooo010 2 0123302 x—11 5—C rn ett (3), Ponse AV%H“. HM‘FF (2) Palk (3), Vosmik, Hus e 1 L. Moore, Burnet Pinceheid " (5), Fonsee Sewell, Harder, Appling (2 osmik (3), Burnett, Fail Btolen bases—Ave: ?lyv—flunneneld Ho- 2), Left on bases— e on balls_— Yy rumr. nefle dapp”and. m.m. " “Clevelan: 3 3 b | Frovier I Lot Cempiresmessrs. Nallin, | Ime of game—2 hours | SR Hiacr, 308 g O T oy x JE: Frasier. 10 n 6 in in sixth): off Moore, & pitcher—By pitcher—Fraster. Owens and Ormisby. nd 15 minutes. it | | | BATTING | R H.2b,3b Hr.8h Sb.RbLPCt, | H. Rice. Spencer e e ennon GG BRERY rrig Tauscher Jones .. Marberr Brown ... Crowder . Go000oH~umoNAL cocccouumaLusan Z ccoooononoomon c00000000Ha0mHON: eoossasscsessas; HoooNOEHOReroNS eos000mscsencee] a:afl:ufl—-——o‘uu‘ov <] 3 B e aQ &1 a3 ’aoeo—eeg 88 1 w 25 Fry 3 coommnE womsnany & |.-_=.-o awsvel) * Sauaas! lamaaes Boley Has Easv Shortfield Day Lefty Grove striking out the Nationals JACK AND ESTELLE PARTED FOR KEEPS Lawyers, After Conference, Say There Is No Hope of Reconciliation. By the Assoclated Press. AN FRANCISCO, April 18.—Hope that Jack Dempsey, former cham- pion heavyweight boxer, and his wife, Estelle Taylor Dempsey, mo- | tion picture actress, could be reconciled appeared to have been abandoned today. Robert E. Burns of Reno, Dempsey's attorney, and Joseph E. Scott of Los Angeles, representing Mrs. Dempsey, met here and discussed the demands of their clients. At the end of the con- ference the attorneys issued the follow- ing joint statement: “We have both come to the conclu- sion that a reconciliation between our respective clients is impossible and re- ld)unmenc of their domestic life can- not be accomplished. ‘Would Avoid Friction. “We are hopeful, both of us, that n divorce can be obtained under circum= stances that will not aggravate the situ- ation, but our instructions from our clients are so limited that we will have to return and each of us do our best to present the viewpoint of the other. This is as far as we feel justified in committing ourselves under the circum- stances without the consent of our | clients.” Dempsey has established residence in Reno, Nev., where under the new six weeks’ divorce law he expects to file suit for divorce. Hes has rented a home for $1,000 & month. Mrs. Dempsey, in Los Angeles, has said she plans to obtain a divorce in California, where she would be able to file at any time. A California divorce, however, would not be final for a year, whereas a Ne- vada divorce would be final when ted. When discussions will be resumed could not be d-termined. Neither law- yer could say when the property settle- | men. stage might be relched. 'STEWART OF BROWNS HURLS ANOTHER WIN Gains Second Victory for Season as Tiger Rally in Eighth Proves Fatile. !y the Assoclated Press. LOUIS, April 18.—The Browns flefuud Demlt in the flml game of the to 3, and gave Wnlfer Stewart, St. Louis pitcher, his second victory of the season. A Tiger rally in the eighth fell short of the 5 runs, including @ homer by se— | Levey in the fourth, alrea dy garnered | by the Browns, who then added 2 more their margin. j StLouls ABH.OA srooonses Stewari,p. . | cocosonmosucul 2| cocoomnucoannd Totnll..fififi7 T *Hih, 0000000303 Alflfllfllnilv'l McMapus, Levey. Mefiio ")+ 3 3 ? @ E: Zohiv | Birhe: Bettencourt | Brior~Beitencourt, Stewart, | Owens. | er. Three-base hits—Bettencourt. Home ru elilo. Levey. Len- on bmn-—omon, 9. balls—OM Bridge: le. " Beruck out By Bridses, 4: by art, '8 “Hits—Off Bridges, 5 in 4 innin Sumv-n. 3,in 2 innings: off Uhle, 3 nines, Wild pitcnes ~Bridges (2), Unle: ing ige: res—Messrs. Gei- sJ fidebread: ~ Time ‘of same =4 nours and 16 minutes. | TROJANS HUMBLE BEARS Score More Than 100 Points for First Time in Track Meet. STANFORD STADIUM, Calif,, April 18 (#).—Scoring more than 100 points for the first time in the history of their 38 years of competition, Stanford Uni- versity’s powerrul track and field team crushed the University of California in their annual big meet today, 10125 to 2915 Kenneth Churchill, California_Star, battered the national collegiate record in the javelin throw, hurling the spear 220 feet, 9 inches. Churchill established the I.C.A. A.A. | record of 212 feet 5 inches at Cam- | bridge, Mass., last year. P WASHINGTO N .50 New York . Cleveland .813 .3!3 cees 33 YESTERDAY’S RESULTS WASHINGTON, 2; Philadeiphia, 1. Cleveland, Chlcn'a, 2. St. Louis, 7; Detrol Boston, 5; New York, l (15 innings). TODAY’S GAMES. Boston at WASHINGTON. Philadelphia at New York. Chicago at St. Louis. Detroit at Cleveland. NATIONAL LEAGUE. W. 1.000 150 srvunmool” New York, 7; Philadelphia, 1. Boston, Brooklyn, 3. TODAY’S GAMES. New York at as ren 3 tew buk of the Athletics’ ICIW was the trouble ‘.th the ch-mplpu Boston. Philadelphia at Brooklyn. St. Louis at Pittsburgh at ? | world champions in the season opener. l.l.b | Haas gave the A’s an opening when he singled off Jones’ glove in the open- | ing round, but the bingle was nullified when Cochrane bounded to Judge, whos= | throw was taken by Cronin for a force out, as depicted in this snapshot.| —~&tar Staff Photos. OLDING to his plan of rotat'nz his pitchers so long as they de- liver, Manager John:on plans | 1 to send against the Red Sox this afternoon in the start of the three- game series the left-handed Lioyd Brown, who did so well when facing the No word as to Manager Collins’ starting slabman had reached town last night, but in all likelthood it will be the be- spectacled Darny MacFayden, a gener- ‘llly troublesome right-hander. Bump Hadley is to get a shot at the |Red Sox tomorrow afternoon and it | may be that Johnson will select Fred Marberry as starter for Tuesday's set: to. The big Texan is confident he is in | condition to go the route in a big league match and is eager to start. Johnson's hint of starting Marberry | is an indication the pilot will drop Al| Crowder from the regular hurling list for the time being. Crowder was wuki when facing the A's as a relief slabman in the eleventh inning of the opener | last Tuesday and seemed to have noth- ing cn the ball when he started Thurs- day. Only sensational support saved him from a terrific beating early in the pastiming. Al evidently is not yet ready | to show his true pitching worth. HATTANOOGA is sending Jimmy McLeod, young_inflelder, back to the Nationals. Just why President Clark Griffith will not learn until a | letter due tomorrow comes from Joe Engel, who is in charge of the Look- outs. McLeod started at third base for | Chattanooga, but after a few games was supplanted by Rube Lutzke, a vet- eran turned out of the majors several years ago. |” What good the Chattanooga farm is | to the Washington club is difficult to | understand. McLeod, during his stay ' with the Natlonals, revealed enough to | 730 brand him a promising prospect and Manager Johnson recommended he be | 50| sent to the farm, believing a year of . 3 | steady play there would make Jimm: |xeldy for Griffith shifted McLeod, instructing 3| Ghattanooga to employ him regularly. But he is being returned to Washington with really no trial at all. Last season the Nationals farmed Cliff Bolton to the Lookouts, expecting the latter to develop him as a catcher. Instead he played in the Chattanooga outfield most of the time with the re- sult that when he reported to the Na- tionals at Biloxi this Spring he was as poor a catcher as ever. Only special tutoring at the training camp brought him around. It seems that the l;olllcsy ag the Sgh:rt& tanooga managemen! t. |young material sent it by the owning Washington club and employ instead a |10t of veterans who may be of help ta a minor organization, but certainly cannot be accounted big league pros- | pects. Why a farm if it doesn’t help | the Washington club? Now President Griffith is casting about for & berth for McLeod. The youngster has no chance to break in here lt res ent, and it probably would do hi .| deal of harm to loaf on the bench (nr | season. Griffith_expects to plant Mc- Leod soon, and he will be planted with | a string attached. the big show. So President|. . . AXTER JORDAN, Newark draftee, | base following vice given him Dy President Griffith. Jordan, probably . most versatile Brown Slated to Hurl Today As Griffmen Tackle Red Sox player on the Washington club—he can parform righ: well at first base, at sec- | ond and in the outfield—was t-1d by the prexy his only chance to get any- where with the Nationals was to acquire a third-basing knack. “We arc well fortified around first base, and the out- field is cared for nicely,” Griffith said to Jordan, “so the best thing for you to | do is try to make a third baseman of yourself. You can help us there if you | improve in your fielding, and there'll be !a job on the club for you if you do.” So Jordan is taking Griffith at his word | -a.nd plugging away at the third-bas business. NE afling arm hanging to a National is getting better, but one attached | to another member of the club isn't doing so well. Ad Liska, whose pitching wing went back on him while the club was in training down South, indulged in a long workout yesterday, and afterward reported the arm on the mend. Liska believes he will be ready for dutf' in another week, if not earlier. | Nick Altrock, veteran coach, still sports a sore arm, however. The left limb, in- jured in a hunting trip accident last Fall, has not responded well to the treatment given it by an Ohio muscle manipulator, and Nick fears it will handicap him in his comedy work with Al Schacht while the Nationals are on the road, as well as prevent him aiding his club in batting drills. Nick is con- sidering another visit to the muscle doc- tor, hoping he may get the arm right before the club opens its.first invasion of the Western sector next month. ASHINGTON'S week in base ball . . . President and 32,000 others see Nats bow to A’s Tuesday in | 11-inning season opener at Griffith Sta- | dium . . . Nats come back Wednesday to drub A’s soundly . . . Hadley hurls brilliantly . . . Tauscher shines after re- lieving Crowder Thursday and A’s are beaten again . Friday off day . Nats visit Annnpnlis and sink the Nnvy Johnson band on Saturday makes it three straight over world champions Marberry comes to Jones' rescue and strikes out Simmons with bases full ... three wins .. .oneloss...®a good start. Minor Leagues Southern Association. Chattanooga, 6; Atlanta, 3. Birmingham, 4; Nashville, 2. New Orleans, 5; Mobile, 2. Memphis, 4; Little Rock, 2. Texas League. Dallas, 7; Shreveport, 5. Galveston, 6; San Antonio, 4. Fort Worth, 12; Wichita Falls, 3. (One night game.) American Association. Mflwnukee. 8; Toledo, 1. ansas City, 15; Columbus, 10. Mlnnel lis, 6; Indianapolis, 1. St. Paul, 15; Lousville, 9. International League. Buffalo, 5; Reading, 4. Montreal, 7; Baltimore, 5. Newark, 5. Jersey City, 8; Toronto, 4. Pacific Coast League. Portland, 5; Oakland, 0. Angeles, 7; Hollyw | men, proved uncqual to the task of | Nationals their two tallies. | | | grabbing that 2-to-1 verdict in a hard- | —Earnshaw, Walberg and Grove. Harry Rice here is shown reaching fence to open the seventh round. He his double in the second. the far corner on his triple off the was stranded, just as he was following ON THE SIDE LINES With the Sports Editor By DENMAN AKING three cut of four from the world champion Philadel- phia Athletics may be termed getting off to a running start. That's just what the Nationals did by | fought battle before close to 17,000 cus- tomers at Griffith Stadium yesterday. A single series dcesn’t make a season, but the one just ended at least served to indicate the Nationals are in dead | earnest about this pennant business, for | in knocking off the Mackmen they gained at the expense of the one club most to be feared and i,n doing so they successfully contended with the best the A’s have to offer in a pitching way ‘The mighty Robert Moses, apparently | as fast as ever and a tough nut to ck as he demonstrated yesterday when | whiffed no fewer than 10 of the Griff- | matchmg the combined efforts of Sam Jones and Fred Marberry. In the mat- ter of hits he had an edge, yielding only five, but every one of them was gcod for extra bases, and he had to utilize all his cunning to escape serious danger that confronted him on no less than three occasions other than '.he‘ cne whete Manush’s walk Cronin's triple and Bluege’s double netted the To Jones goes the credit for winning the game, as the rules are specific on that point, but, considering the exhibi- tion he gave when called to Sam's rescue, Marberry certainly is entitled to half the glory, even though it is not entered in the official records. What Marberry Tackled. Two cn_base, only one out and two balls credited to the batsman was the situation when Fred got into the pastime almost stone cold. He com- pleted the ‘pass to Haas and almcst issued another to Cochrane before he could make the ball behave and dis- pose of Mickey. Then all he had to contend with was Al Simmons, and he did it by fanning that redoubtable slug- ger as the fans roared with a mixture of appreciation and relief. An odd angle to the battle was that the Macks’' lone tally was a gift, pure and simple, from Cronin, who made a wild heave after spectacularly knocking down a hit from the bat of Simmons, but Joe atoned for this in the follow- ing frame when his wallop to deepest center scored one run and paved the way for the other. Splendid wallops produced by the Rice boys led to nothing at all. Harry's double to left with one out in the second was wasted, as was a triple he lined against the right fleld wall with no one out in the seventh and a three- bagger by Sam in the eighth when there was but one gone. With a single | tally looming so large it seemed the squeeze might well have been essayed on either of these last two occasions, for Grove's stuff certainly is no tougher to bunt than to hit. But then the Ni tionals won and its not easy to quar- rel with success. « And speaking of Harry Rice, whose six hits in 14 times at bat thus far this season, including two triples and a double, give him an average of .429 to balance his sensational field.ing, it is a safe bet Pilot Johnson will allow | pige; West plenty of time to recover from his recent spell of illness. A New Deal Today. 'HERE will be a new deal at Griffith Stadium this afternoon, when the Boston Red Sox make their initial appearance of the season to open a set of three games, and despite the fact they got off to a poor start against the ‘Yankees, a turnout of close to 20,000 may be_expected with good for the Hose always a battle regardless of their pere low position in the race. The Sox this year are under the leadership of John (Shano) Collins, whom old-time fans will recall as a star outfielder at the Hub, and he has the players hustling for all they are worth. His ambition is to get them cut of the American League cellar, which they have occupied for the last six seasons in a row'and for eight of the last nlng years. Collins has a dy- | Danny MacFayden, THOMPSON It is not for any lack of pitching strength that the Hose seem doomed again to occupy the basement, for they boast of a st2ff that compares favor- ably with that of any team in the two | big leagues. Milt Gaston, Horace Lis- enbee, the ex-Nationals, along with Ed Morris and Jack Ruscell are hurlers who would prove consistent winners with a club possessing adequate power. Two Others Also. But this isn't the full extent of Bos- ton’s mound strength, for to them have been added Wilcy Moore, the one-time Yankee, who 1s said to have regained the sinker ball that once earned fame f6r him and Jehosophat Besselievre Brillheart, a left-hander of great promise with the Griffmen several | years ago, when illness threatened to | end his career. Collins _has set about rebuilding the team and already has made consider- |able progress in weeding out dead wood, but it still is in an experimental | stage, with ficlding uncertain and the | punch so badly needed still conspicu- ous by its absence. Only in the box are the Sox a first- s outfit, there and back of the bat ere_Chariey Berry, a high-grade re- ceiver, now has the assistance of Muddy Ruel, sold to Boston by Wash- ington last Winter. Ruel for eight years wore local livery, helped the Na- tionals win a couple of pennants and !tfllhulltoprnobchhllehu in his system. He always has held in Y.he highest esteem by &MN andom, both for his prowess a leer and gentlemanly bearing ufl the fleld and his admirers today are going to present him with a token of the regard they feel for him when he takes the fleld to do the catching against his former team mates. Bad News for Fair Sex. ISAPPOINTMENT among the Capi- tal's fair population because no championship game was sche- duled for the National's Friday was intense. The women folk wanted io see the Nationals in action, not to mention the world champion Athletics, without the necessity for digging into their allowance for groceries, and nu- merous phone calls to the desk where this column is ground out disclosed great annoyance was felt because Wal- ter Johnson and his men were at An- | napolis for a tilt with the midshipmen. Friday is and has been for many seasons in Washington Ladies’ Day when feminine fans are admitted as the guests of the club with no need for being accompanied by an escort and advantage of it always has been taken most liberally and this year with the Griffs a definite pennant threat it promises to be more popular than ever before. To all questions as to how many | ladies’ days would be held here tms season we answered “about a dozen,” from rapid mental calculation based on the fact the season lasts 24 weeks and that the Nationals are at home half the time. But when we found the time to look into the matter it was discovered more disappointment confronts the shrill-voiced rooters. For instance, the first Friday that the Griffmen are scheduled to play here is not until June 5, when the Detroit Tigers will be the attraction. After that l&z five other Fridays will find the Washington club at home and not once are the Athletics billed, while the St. Louis Browns also do not appear here on a Friday. If the schedule is maintained as orig- inally drawn the second ladies’ day of the season will be June 12, with Cleve- land’s Indians furnishing the opposi- tion. There is a h.hms en of lenst a month before the Boston Red Sox show on July 10, with Chicago’s White Sox coming a week later, July 17. The only appearance here on a Friday of Babe Ruth and the remainder of the slugging Yankee crew is September 4 and the courtesy calendar ends Sep- tember 18, when Detroit makes a sec- ond Friday stan Of course, this program is subject to revision, depending upon tie games and postponements due. to bad weather, but the chai are about even that luck will m ir fans rather than witl em in this b Hal lemme pd for doubtful the bunch he is bossing this his goal. 1f & dozen of 77 games bookeg for the Nation it home are the s can ex] to see free, gratis nothing, | Two SECOND T0 BAUSCH Intercollegiate Marks Are Broken in Kansas Relay Carnival. By the Assoclated Press. WRENCE, Kans., April 18— A L Officials who juggled figures all day tonight decided that James A. (Jerring Jim) Bausch and not Wilson (Buster) Charles had won the decathlon of the Kansas relays, adding unex- pected climax to a day of bril- liant performances that included the shattering of two intercol- legiate relay marks. Bausch, who thus defeated the Na- tional A. A. U. decathlon champion, was entercd in the meet under the colors of the Kansas Olty Athletic Club. He is & student at the Uni- versity of Kansas here. Charles, an Oneida Indian student at Haskell Institute, won the national” championship last year at Pittsburgh, and in the first five events of the de- cathlon, conducted yesterday, far oute distanced the field. Bausch scored heavily in today’'s field events, however, and the final score . was Bauscn, 7846.2203; Charles, 7744.1205. Mest Marks Fall A swarm of Midwestern and Far Western athletes who participated in the rel-y: also eclipsed numerous meet records. A fleet quartet of milers from th University of Illinois beat the lnm- collegiate 4-mile relay record made oy another Illini team 1929. GO!IH. Garrison, Woolsey and Evans st the long distance in 17:37.8. intercollegiate record was 17:40.2 and the former Kansas relays mark by the , Ynlnv!fl;slty of Indiana in 1930 was 8:03.4. The Kansas Jayhakers, running on their home track, lowered the half mile relay record 1:24.5, defeating tie University of Iowa. Nebraska and ngitihlgm jointly held the cld record o Edward Gordon, Negro from the Uni- versity of Iowa, set up a new broad jump mark for the Kansas carnival vi a leap of 25 feet 4% inches in preliminaries. It was his best jump ol the day, although in the finals eas] defeated Timberlake of Wuhl.nmn State, retaining the title he won here last year. Charles fine ished fourth in the cpen brcad jump. Runs Century in 9.5. Favored by a breeze out of the South, Paul Swift, Washington State College sophomore streak, nosed out Glass of the Oklahoma Aggies in the 100-yard . The winner's time was 9.5, the same as he made in the fastest heat and one second less than the Kansas relays record made by Cy Leland last of t.he Univenlty at led his Kansas relays m-yll'd hurdle record of 116 in the llmi- naries and the finals, in which he fin- ished with an aj able lead over Hager of Iowa College. ‘The revised decathlon figures Carl Parker of Lake Forrest (IlllnM! College). who_finished third, a total of 6664.2572. Bausch’s point total bet- | ters the American record cf 7784.68 of Kenneth Doherty, College of the City of Detroit, but may not stand because of confusion in timing. Summaries: 120-YARD HiGH HURDLES -Won by Sent- man_(Tilinols) ate), second; Hatfleld (Indias 100-YARD D ington State); Gl hxu!l)hfi. o EE = S e S S B e R R ), gt b D, ‘lld for first at 13 feet 6 LLEGE DIS’ nnin e, sotond; Collese of Eme poria, third; Butle; fourth. ' Time, 1 T0:24 1. JAVE} y dis: e "zh‘"fi"' i (Waitigion second. h; {Soutriern Methodist Unlv:rfl )" fhird: 183 iversity of 'l'ex-n. {ou inches). one (Southwest- ern ‘Soachers® College, Dklahoma) and. Gor- don of University n( Tow 315 inches): Nelson (Butler) and Rus {Bradley =Polytechnic an"‘ull) tied for third (6 feet 2 inches). UNIVERSITY MEDLI RELAY—Won by Oklahoma University (Cherry, Fere, MM!! and Dawson): Indiana University, nd: Chicago University, lhll’d Nebraska Unl\'tr- sity. fourth. Time. 10 ONE-] Ill.l' 'JNIVII!I'I" RELAY—Won by Gulley. Stuart and Wester- piversity, second: ,l:ebruhv Won Chicago . (Herrick: " Nelson, . Braivard and Letts)) washingtoh, State, fecond: Nebraska, third: Drake. fourt me, 17:52.5. ansas re SHOTPUT--Won by’ nhe.mebnn-» Burke (Rice Institute), second: Spra uthern Methodist). third: Blanck (Drake), fourth. Distonce, 4 Teet. a1~ inches. COLLEG! Y—Won Abllene (Texas) T!lth!!! of Pltuhuuh, 3 kota University, third; f:lll‘(h ‘Time, 7:54.5. (New Kansas relny: E QUAITII -MILE _UNIVERSITY RELAY kel Sones ana " KIabep - Dot B imois, fecond:” Skighoma,” Chicaro and fowa tied for third. Time, BROA] __Won by Gordon_(Univer- sity of Town), 36 feet 43 inches: Timerinke (Washington "University), 24 feet is inch. gecond; Gray (Nebraske). 33 fest 10% inches; third: 'Charles (Haskell ' Institute), 23 1 inches, “fourth - (New " Ransss reisy record.) CUS by Purma (University of TPolo). 139 Teet 13 inches; Sprasue (South- ern Methodist), 136 1 inches, second: ; ‘oungerman '(University o Toga). 128 feet €15 inches. fourth. R-MILE UNIVERSITY RELAY—Wo: by Tinols (o, Garrison, Woolses an rans); Towa St ‘Ma ate Coll s thir Fauette fafeq io Amiah. m"ll‘;rg:. tNre") Kanisas relays ‘and Intercors i HALF-MILE_COLLEGE Kabgas State Teachers O PIrsbiren (8w Gty Unlversity, “setond: "Busier. Unverciies 3 : “Butler- University: third: " Oltawa ' Universits, fourth. Time, VHALr-Mie_oivemsy r—wWon by Kansas (Coffman, Orldlay !le l.l and Kianer): Towa U Chicaso lingls Untgersity u..? fo Third Hine g ¢ relay and intercol- te record) By the Associated Press. Home runs yesterday—Berry, Red Sox, 1; Yankees, 1; Levey, Bmm. 1. — Klein, Phillies, 3; Hornahy. Cubs, 3; Berry, Red tom 3. Grand total, 27. 2 . can, 1.