Evening Star Newspaper, May 31, 1931, Page 57

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SPORTS SECTION Base Ball, Boxing | @‘] e gunfluy %1&? WASHINGTON, D.” C., SUNDAY 'MORNING, MAY 31, 1931 "Part 5—4 Pages Trojans Crack Records in Track Victory : Griffs Split Twin Bill With Yankees U. S. Netmen Clean Up in Davis Cup Play : Columbia Wins Child’s Cup Regatta - UTCONE INDOUBT BEATSPENNCREW || Bis Leaguers Strut Stuf for Throng at Grffith Stadium | pAe 3 TIT 0SF |SHELDS, SUTTER UNTILFINAL EVENTBY FOLR LENGTHS ' BTTER 38 BATILE, BLANK INVADERS Stanford Gives Close Battle|Princeton Finishes Third as| First Game Nicely Pitched.New Orleans Youngster as Victors Set Five New | Lions Set New Record With Second Hurlers’ Parade. | Makes Brilliant Fight to Get I. C. A. A. A. A. Marks. Four Straight Victories. Four Homers Hit. European Trip Berth. BY ALAN GOULD, By the Associated Press. . » : -, BY JOHN B. KELLER. BY R. D, THOMAS. Assoclated Press Sports Editor. : RINCETON, N. J,, May 30.— - w ‘ . ALF a loaf is better than HE United States scored a phia, May 30.—The ans s e Nationals reason abou Argentina when Frank of Southern California an- the varsity race of the double-headers. For the Shields, 20-year-old New swered Stanford’s track and fleld challenge today with a sen- sational counter-barrage of rec- T ord performances and won the intercollegiate AAAA champion- ships for the second straight year in a dazzlingly close battle for points. | Six record feats were achieved, five | of them by Southern California stars, as the Trojans barely beat their Pacific Coast rivals in as brilliant a succession | of performances as the classic 55-year- | old college meet has ever witnessed. Southern California finished with the | victorious total of 46 6-7 points, while| Stanford, giving battle every step and inch of the route, amassed 44 22-35 \ points. The scramble of fractions and Pplaces was so close that the outcome was undecided until Bill Graber, Tro- jan pole vaulter, outdid himself to lead | to a new meet record of 14 feet !3 inch, in ‘the fifteenth and final event of me‘ day. Childs Cup regatta today for the fourth successive time. The ‘Lion eight, stroked by Macready Sykes, rowed the mile and three-quarters in Lake Car- negie in 9:43, and beat Penn by four lengths, with Princeton an- other three-quarters of a length behind. Columbia’s string of four straight' Childs' Cup victories established & new | record for the competition, for, since 1879, when the event first was rowed, | no crew hitherto has been able to win | the cup for more than three years in succession, The other three races of the program were evenly divided. Penn easily won the freshman race, beating Columbia by three lengths and Princeton by sev- en. Columbia's 150-pound freshman crew beat Princeton by two lengths and Penn by two and one-half. Prince- ton's victory was scored in the opening race, a dual affair between the Tiger and Penn second freshman crews. Princeton, in this event, came from behind to win by a scant half length. Here Ruth is seen being killed off at third base In round 3 of the second game after poling a double that scored Reese with the first Yankee run of the nightcap. The Bambino, in trying to stretch his hit, was nailed on Cronin's relay from West to Bluege. third time this season they split a twin bill yesterday, taking the first game, 3 to 2, then bowing to the Yankees in the 9-to-8 second. | The opening encounter was bag- ged more easily than the score indicates for not until the ninth inning did the New Yorkers put | across their second run. The clos- | ing portion of the bargain mmr; developed into a bitter battle after | the Yanks seemingly had it nicely | tucked away and kept the 25,060 Memorial day crowd on edge to| the finish. | There was much swinging of bats in both tilts with the Yanks outswatting the home side, 10 safeties to 9, in the | first 13 blows to 9 in the second. Each | club provided two home-run smackers. Joe Cronin's drive into the left-field | Yorker, and Clifford Sutter, New Orleans youngster, won the con- cluding singles of the Western Hemisphere Davis Cup final yes- terday at Chevy Chase. Shields polished off Ronaldo Boyd, 6—2, 6—2, 6—2 and Sutter, making his Davis Cup debut, won a dramatic match with Guiliermo | Robson, 3—8, 6—3. Boyd, No. 1, ranking player of Argen- tina, fell an easy victim to Shields who scored his third victory of the series, | having previously beaten Robson and shared with Sidney Wood a doubles triumph over Zappa and Del Castillo. Although the matches had no cham- plonship bearing. the largest gallery of | the series, numbering close to 3,000, | disdained a scorching sun and was re- warded with a first-class tennis show. Among those who seemed to enjoy it immensely were a triumvirate of the Naticn's leading legal lights, Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes and As- - sociate Justice Pierce Butler of the Vie Williams Sensational. Graber’s record vault was the crown- L. C. 4-A Results ing climax of probably the greatest ex- hibition ever given by any team thati 100.-YARD DASH—Won by Frank Wykofl has won this blus ribbon event of in-| (Southern Calfornia): “second, Eddie ‘oian tercollegiate athletic competition, i tnird, Albyslk‘m Kelly_(George- Vie Wililams, slim Trojan racer,| fifth, struck the most sensational blow for !"" AY'A‘“ Standings in Major Circuits stand in the fourth frame gave Wash- | | ington its initial run of the first clash. | Attoeaes ammerss P tiaC Lt and, the ;l';envmhwel - mefl::;;bl:'i‘gg fi;l;flael: Ambassador Manuel Maribran, who has SUNDAY, MAY 31, Yanks in the ninth, 3,'5“,,,",‘:‘4;’, R ST EDTT e | _Lou Gehrig of the visitors and Joe | Ku!iml o(kth: fllhuonlls. ka;de to Ihe\ ‘Will Meet Europeans. angle back of right-center in the second cottest. There was oo one on the rune | s 21, Seating Argentina, champion of way when Lou smote his four-baser in CLOUTING ROBINS OVERRIDE GIANTS American League. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. National League. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. rooklyn. S. 5 secon h A w. his tram's benefit when he turned the | performiance Nin’ smichanis” nna"aun'lmrx'u tables on the brilllant Stanford sopho- more, Ban Eastman, to win the 440- yard run and equal Ted Meredith's 15- the, former mark of 9110 seconds.) DASH—-Won by Eddie Tolan | . Lesli> Hables (Stan- (Cornell); fourth, Bissonette’s Homer in Ninth the same round came with two mates | the sixth inning, but Kuhel's made m:earned the right to meet the winner of European play for a shot at France in the challerge round. A victory for Shields yesterday was . . 2 7 | On, started the Washington scoring and Five Runs in 12th Give A’s|pnoriaien, ne We A e T e ol —SQiy in Ni Fischer Halts Yanks. Boyd, not in the best of condition due Opener—Six in Ninth Turn Those old-timers, Sam Jones and the |0 Tecent iliness. was declared by his left-handed Herb Pennock, hooked up | Sammates to be 20 per cent below form. Second to Boston. in 8 mound duel in the first part of the | e, 10t one of the opening singles to twin sketch. Jones weakened tempor- | Lhe sensation of the tie. the fragile- arily after getting two out in the third appearing but quite durable and light- | ning-swift Sid Wood, aged 19. PRI PN LB inning. then held the Yanks at bay | /B8l | plaved his usual hard-driving OSTON, May 30.—A 6-run nuy‘:;:& Lazzeri got that homer in the| came and literally slugged his way to by Boston imthe ninth inning| “\when Earl Combs followed ‘with a | ¢ _decision. ~Boyd never threatened ord) Carl Meini ear-old world record of 47.4 seconds. G!o‘ue.r:rroy {Brown)? fin. “Keown (Frince- Prom there on Southern California’s| ‘3o yARG' DASH (semi-nate)—First heat. stazs conducted & wholesale assault on | zop by Caiviy, Mtler'cw M-m.vw urc’:“,d recorZs. Prank Wykoff whippe e an (Michizan); tnird, Roy Delby 6 seconds. to equal ? second. Ca: 1 . r’;cord' Dick m,b::' leaped to s new Bernard 7!(:::;.:3’ New 'Ym? University): 3 C. A. A. A A broad jump mark of | " Third ~ heat— by _Arihur _Keown | By the Associated Press. YORK, May 30.—Before | 60,000 fans, a crowd which is | believed to have set a National | g Decides First Game; 22 Hits Feature Second. [— J wiudjepuiit the 220-yard low hurdles, raced to vic- ,’;*:d_,'{g',;ggfl" Granam (Eracise) tory in 23.6 s>conds, equalling the mert Won by Victor Williars | RD RUN o (Southern Canorniny; becand. Bon Eapimmen | record first set in 1898 by the late A. I A e toppled the world champlon single, Carl Fischer way ‘hurried to foriously, and as the match wore on | the 210-j Athletics in the second game ol‘ Jones' relief. ~ With blinding speec ‘!tlenptmgpo ':“;‘mi?w"’.'%m:‘“hl"p.&‘; the holiday double-header, 6 to 5, and | $afl struck out Pinch-batter Sam ”b’:““up a number of aces that might have enabled the Red Sox to share the day’s | E g's Des been within his reach. Ever so often 25 feet 3'; inches, and Ernie Payne, in | (Princeton): George Troy (Brown): NW C. Kraenzlein of Pennsylvania. Win Six First Places. | League attendance record, the : Brooklyn Robins won two games from a0 Gromwell Towped. o with_ 6% : the Giants today. The Robins took the AMES TODAT GAMES TOMORROW. was a hoist to the shortstop. Dean Cromwell romped off with six ,m,,,,ml, RUN-Wos o7 i first, 6 0 2, in 10 innings, then ham- | New York st New York a1 . OW. | honors. _Philadelphia won the first e Chtpet il 1 pain, Pennock w: ely i fir, places and scored points in 10 of| Bied; James Kol Gepmtowny, Tabriny | P 0 0 0 T aton 1n the | Eng st Boorto. Beol M Sl | B W Fox gonon w1 me B 1 Sl oS e | IS Sl Tounds Ot bt e Nex :Shows Occasional Flashes. the 15 events. It was not only the Tro- | B Gyttt d PO L i B4 O4eet Tieverat Petroses o Ohers i enicags, o Do Seheduled.| o mmel and Walberg were unable i | HONals mever got more ‘than one run| Occasionally he put eversthing he i jans' second straight victory in the|onds. Point jeaders: Stanford. 31 3-7; | second. heck the Red Sox rally in the second | in an inning. Not until the sixth ses- | hag into the battle e feam Champlonship, but their fourts | Sogthers Caluartis S0 1 Hittire In the opener, Carl Hubbell's pitch- sume. Bickerings Two-bagger scored |Sion did #hey get ahead of the Yanks | drives missed the sidelines by inches. t NEIUIEE KN won by N in seven years. They won previous), d o ) and they ‘were compelled to wait until B s P ¥ | lowell (iRreara) " secoria."Cari Gonr (e ing had the Robins almost stopped wp | TW() KELLYS PLACE he tying and winning runs with one | 2 His brilliant bits failed to annoy the heir last batting turn for what proved | j o Ge . fost 3 t. implacable Shields, who hammered Stanford, handicapped severely by | Ny, Goorfe, Bujminkle r"’u | e e it v out i 1 e Half a Loa O Simmons went hitless in the second | the decisive tally. ‘mann ki the loss of two brilliant performers in | Toms. X Fime. 4 min I8 see. o (e D e ciouted & homer with. two f Stmmoy nt hitle e second away in the manner of a workman = - | _ Bob Burke and Henry Johnson were Hee Dyer in the sprinis and Capt. | TWO-MILE, RUN won by soseon we. | Blssonette clouted s homer with two INI.C.A.A. A. A. MEET e contasis” Has. Enocked” | DUl opponents &t the cutset of the | Uiahis 15 tove mith h Mo }’odle smgnu:gegeczmghn:vznfi;- lcamell)‘ 'mra"i’-- 1‘:33?;-‘“"% fi:"u: homer in the second game, but it was home run in the twelfth inning of the | Second set-to, but neither lasted. Burke, | steamy shots, the South American was bl i e e Mttt Btlle O Charles Melsineer (Penn Biate | Just one of Dy Z"‘ ?l‘fe : - . Eaiialed the East outclassed for the tenth time | * 535 ¥ARD HURDLES—Won by Ernest | b:::e?‘:‘lt:n:he ther by Giouting s four- | Bix Records Broken or Equ as, « in 11 years. pasge et it B oo | PR N Robins s, commanding Jeed| Southern California Retains Team Title. Games fost_ . [10[13118(7110/30/71139/——: GAMES -muonow GAMES TODAY. n Eastman FIRST GAME. ; starting for ‘the first time this year, frst Shime to start the A's winning 5| qiq well until after getting out the first | tejeg. Wa aech ooy ro, hnd a8 he o rally. two batters up in the sixth. Then came | faits were frequent, 2 three hits in a row for two tallies and i With Sbields the match was hardly in the seventh he was yanked after |more. than an exhibition. | The g' uth had been purposely passed to fill | was far different with young sutm in | the bases with one out. his battle with Robson. The New Or- Irving Hadley, Bob's successor, could | jeans lad, ambitious as they come in not retire a batter until five runs had | tennis, was out to make the best show. crossed. Washington rallies had Man- | ing possible in the hope he would be ager Johnson throwing his pinch-bat- | cent to Europe with Shields and Wood, ters into the fray so Al Crowder and | wn Fischer each pitched an inning with | Tot; and Jonn yas g 00 George the Yanks' big run being made off the | latter in the ninth, although Burke Was | most formidea ¢ noy [Lrobably the charged with the loss. tiest racket wielder of the Argentine 00000000005 8| The Yankee starting hurler outside of | feam. It wae Merscn <i gave the 886808088 aary | the sixth inning was sturdy until the | Yankees their only really anxious mo.. n.:_nem @, _Gnve. ? Mil: | elghth when with two out and two on | ments, when he took the first set of he forced over a run by walking two | the opening singles from Shields, batters. Roy Sherid came on to force over m&thermnl& ih s walk and Profits by Shields’ Experiences. urned the over to the left-| Sutter profitted by Shields' handed Vernon Gomez. The first thing | ence. Therew Yorker at dfhem Gomez did was to force over a third | went after Robson as though he would tally with a pass and in_ the ninth | annihilate him, but found his opponent he was reached for two runs before | armed with the barbed wire of .craft. checking the rampaging Nationals. Physically he was not durable, how!v:r. Visitors Start Scoring. and after winning a single skirmish Successive singles by Combs, Reese | With Shields had Tittle Teft and Ruth with two out in the third | 8o it was i his effort to best Sutter frame started the Yankee scoring in | ind saye his team !d!rmn 8 whitewash- the first game, but Cronin’s homer with bl‘lllllnm! . F yl possibly the mm: two out in th fourth matched this run | Tl Sennis of the campaign and the Nationals plcked upa uflegnd mfifl'{:n E;fic‘m“g&dmeflzwm e e Bt lced, | Doured mot o, be wiried wierl Hsbacy cmm'ed after Cronin’s hoist was caught | T80 UP & 4—2 lead in the second set. by Combs. Jones’ single, Meyer's sacri- | The Argentine, though placing his shots fice and Sam Rice’s one-baser ac- | Cleverly and carrying on a flashy game Jemuted for the third Washington tally | P close range. tired steadily. ~Sutter that crossed in the eighth. All the had mapped his campaign. He would T L 1 e mnuth with doubleho in the thlelr: m*{; :l-lgm:g;md the finish it ceased Y (3), Pt Pidk- 'llh the first Yankee cun‘i e ucond' If Robson was fighting to save his i Be an, Sweeney. r two were out in the | country from wxszleu rout, Sutter was ., E. Miller, McNair, Boley, Ma- e visitors got two more. nation’s slate clean o -—53"'"' By |Kuhcl's homer following passes to [3nd the crowd sensed the drama be- tts-Poxx, E. Miler, Manush and Bluege offset this New |hind their efforts. Every excellent shot caom oliver T Fonme | York count, but the Yanks came back ;"n::fl:mluflnhuded and as often G | % R 0 S g | T o R it e SRS n the 'third Amerle-n boy these hundreds of Yan- She kees in the stands could not deny the 1 in none; off Walbe m of flmke struggling veteran, nor {n gomeL9F ,""ufi'{:‘.‘fin_ nomer, °F '_ w Ymka fell “Dl? Hldley for two hits. e edmhmu o llr:fl-lmml.nshmal 3‘1&5 Wlnnln DIqu meant two runs and le mel. Roifin” Srminy e irie iyt e and | & strong will o win on both stics, v .nn Swens. Fime of samé—1 hour and & K::, as Spencer let one of Hldley' to all outward appearances, to Robson minutes. it was a game. He grinned apprecia- The Natiopals rallied gamely, but to | ton tgl the ¢ enemy's skill when shots no avail. Manush opened their eighth past ‘then struggled on batting turn with a single and between | With renewed determination. two outs: West's Sutter Overcomes Lead. The turning point of tne match came in the second set when Sutter '.rlx!ed 2—4 1l“ml with the score 40—0 o : cosoomrontons Stanford tallied in 11 events, ran |§S hert hit aix Shmes 0 seven up a heavy total in the weights and %}n'"v‘v‘i‘r’fi& é P e o Vased atna: had the satisfaction of seeing their o:rflne":) by lh! llelA C‘ En‘!nll!ln Penn- Scores: Bacr gallantly o capbure. the. B0 vard | TS VAnD LOW MIRDLES (semt-fusie): FIRST ck gallantly capture e -vard | ‘ARD ,l L1 sem! als) run after barely being beaten by Wil- \l’"‘“ ;;‘-;T“_gog‘; YUgliiam Oarls (Southern | prookiyn ABHOA llnn}s by .d 1-?‘{‘\1 X:l:orsin in the flhird. Charles Scarlett (Princeton). | Fredick cf. werld's record-equaling 440. lbert, 08 3 hird, fred Nys anford). Tim 41 . I went to the credit of Kenneth | . 30-YARD. JBIGH HURDLES_Won by Eu. Churchill, University of California, in | & ok B T T L ;h?d];n“n ‘He :lde & “show” n(nhis rth, v‘ pam Biosss gumne(z&mmm o e} )y tossing the spear 220 feet, i o - Totals ..40 930 § Totals inches, surpassing his own I C. A. ot SOMY. “Batted for Slade In ninth ini O iiian Y U ¢ A. A. record by more than 8 feet and inches: tBattad for Hubbell 1n tentb mmn. Eastern team in the mq . James 1t ’ (Southe: 00 Aloysius Kelly, hdoor ‘intercollegiate registering the best javelin toss ever v (oalifornia). | Brookiyn ....0 made in a college championship meet. h), 6 feet 3 inches: Aty New York ...0 o x H o 10 o "u. l:;l n’mgt clg:mp:cana n‘:lll:hlrd in themfl:hll : ), we e Pennsylvania Is Third. {:2?"Al‘lvghlfllln me; Runs—Prederick. gllb‘!k !l‘l\;},ll' of the ya which was won Pennsylvania, due mainly to the 5"‘,’,":“ | Tt of ‘Beutharn Callfole the de: wa " | Wykoff of Southern California, the de- e, Thiteell. mighty efforts of Barney Berlinger, fin. st Duncan. e; | Al K ished a distant third, with 21 points, i Teet ] | Prederick. Blasonéite,” serNew | Tolan of Michigan, for first place. sha "5 minutgg L O 35, e, Quikers showed the WA 05 | o KOAD JUME_mun by, Riphged, Berver | BibGel 17 S ?.“'"".,".“"'s“ o | s e 104 the Neld for the rst’ 20 | AL 3 h bl (Enils ABEOA; Bouon linger. in his farewell o intercollegiate | record: Feby former agk ot 3 deel 1% | Wity “ouitles; Botan Und“Mcarew Tards e Wykoh. came i o Kelly | et YS: > Rhyne;es competition, finished second in the pole | ierdsy A mm-u ark of 28 feet 7a inch 5" Hoirs ahd § mi el and passed the tall Washington athlete. vault with '13 feet, 8 inches, the best | et by i ithern California. in Tolan came fast in the final 20 yarcs to take second place and almost catch Hi b o) secs ine Bovle (P i he has ever done outdoors; scored cec- | b it SR .L‘,fi'" e oa Weless "Buile: | mrookiyn. Jones (Perkine). the winper. Sl Morierty ..:'A”fiua.nr...a Time of same Georgetown scored its other points in | 5 Foirs and & minutes. es; in the 1i | (8t d).fllll H . Ar- o pece ln e jeeeln s 6 dnal| Supclel IR O B e RN the 880 yards, when Jii mmy Kelly took third place to a good field. This other fifth in the shot put with 47 feet' ‘flnf(t'r‘x;!'l‘hefldure Smith ' (Syracuse), 23 feet 7 of the Kelly family had a chance to win the event when he came VAULT—Wi by = Willi “(':og‘:g‘l"finuhed a close fourth with ‘ "“""""; ‘i'“‘"m::‘ 0 et L Tl ey x‘%m up with the leaders in the final Eastman, the big Stanford | Ge 103 poinis, and Harvard took Afth | by Safin’cati (Fale): 1857} sftond, Bacney place with 15 3-7 points, due chiefly | Berliussr (Fennsvivania). 13 feet 8 inchy lwmore. breezed into first place in the last few yards in the good time'of 1 minute 54 4-10 seconds, and Huse of | Lary, fo "Red" Record's brillant victory in | loff ‘ogrf?, SvertuGhuler (bl £6: Brown, tock second about a foot ahead | Jo7% of Kelly. Rosner of Princeton lsd most the 120-yard high hurdles in 14.6 sec- | ®ard De Groot . (Stanford). Geor onds and Pen Hallowell's triumph in '"fl’fg,"'" °,’,°l,lg °'4“'|‘n’en iment Wil George Bullwinkle of C. C. N. Y., the inchet:” fourth, ), | Brookly: 1930 winner. Yale was sixth with 13 |45, feet 8% ‘;; r""‘;s{ Runs_Prederick, Gilbert /31, Herman of the way, but gave out in the final | Gom B:gsonene (2), Lopez ( O'Doul ll)am furlong. o 0 5| worossaseua® hila. luhw F Special Dispatch to The Star. £ PHILADELPHIA, May 30. — Two ey Georgetown athletes placed in the in-| B’ tercollegiate track and field champion- ships which wcre held here this aiter- *Batted for Perkins in el noon and in which six records were| (Batied for Pennock in i broken and equaled as Southern Cali- fornia: retained its team titie on the JFranklin Field track. The Hilltoppers scored six points in |, the events to finish behind the m.i;l‘l‘ll 0 camonmmaiinm omvausousw? & coomonmsomouc® | coscsscscones™ Al e Sasaluamm H g2 orieamtmanig B 5| oresaenuenimn B owearsaoni & g PR -1 samouammimn] mrooomNNe ouo.—a.n.. BN Hi o—onoe—o—flow‘ 528 vl omosccescesery SoaSomaumr: ccconorcoal e ea: fending champion, just nosed out Eddie pa, 31 lin_and Ow: Foni > o o ) .o...“a.eeeuvu’ VanCamplb Sweeney,1b ebb.rf ... Pickering,3b Rye.l ot SECOND GAME. > Il i meocoummirroru | 0000mmmr il %l coscucamansond sl e-a—a-ue-ne.u? Serauarri: Bis'ette,1b. moomanoSuar TR cooncavwman oonoosoMMmmmn | coo0auons cosuLmLALar] r"‘ Sohcus ot el son the mile, where he staged a thrilling | s 'rrv'r-—won by “Hall (soutmrn 32223713 vania, Arthur Martin of Cornell and |fhica Netson Co minx d). 'mz 'n; £ e dB DI LI ;%';l{:l’l":z o'f' 'HROW—! Kenneth I mpas. Ss (31, Ceno g e e e s e e D T churehill (Califernin). 90 teer 111 TRehes | Torry: Sakson: OSrarcell, Heving. his title in the hammer throw. TS § hondk. 8 Teord; former, mark. | Slade, Lindstrom, Ko Michigan’s total of nine points, for :u "g'et .|nr.he ny on' "h"i‘ lnm in—L seventh place, were contributed en- | gnq- Bernard ird, 18 Byer i tirely by the colored sprint flash, Eddie H‘].’y.';. pd ) "i»'z" {15308 Thehen: .‘,2"5‘.{"‘ . He came w a rusl in e .3 et aimoct eauisit, Wykofh, the | Bt Keggetk Mkint (Gouthern " Cui- ing champion, and then romped| DISCUS /—Won by Rob,’rt Jones de’e: Off with ‘ihe 230-yard dash in 211 sece (Santord). 158 feet 2 inches International League. onds, beating Al Hables of Stanford Emn..,m'-?:“'lha'.'.‘hcz""“"‘"' Newark, 4-11; Jersey City, 1-5. le an{c 8 3 by five yards. b0, 10Tt 1087 hies %R = Rike--ont hester, 3-2; Toronto, ; : . MeCluskey Proves Game. | Wit Barfdf i T e o L € Tia; Reding. 11 Viz Willlams! victory over Eastman o “n ‘ ln ‘ muul-o American Association. in the 440 wt‘!t\h tbr:e sr:aueut r‘l.ce nlf 3‘1! :n e ' {L K A le'}";i'.' ménm F:!._"e St. Paul, 12-2; Minneapclis,, 4-1. was the est su-prise of the | inches: four —Walker, s, eny finals, although the two Far Western '('f):'r\:nemh!";fl,‘u’e'lt;"fnc;:'."‘ vicior & Y e iy 7. Time of same—3 hours | Golumbus, 7-2; Toledo, 0-3. Batted for Bntal: ' enth innine speedcters have been ciocely matched Loulsvilie at Indianapolis, rain, 58188388 8 11 along. oo ScOluskey, the Manchester Southern Assoclation. 2 R B e (Copn.) boy running for Fordham, Memphis, 4-11; New Orleans, 3-10. ) Chapman (3). B mm-;‘-&mmor:lh 3 turned in one of the gamest r!nm- Little Rock, 6-0; Mobile, 3-11. T wia Drtw WK g ances when he picked himsel out Birmingham, 7-5; Nashville, 3-1. of the cinders, where he was um led in Chattanooga, 9; Atlanta, 0. ' a jam on the first turn, lnd raced on Eastern League._ 20 Norfolk, 7-4; Richmond, 6-8. to win the two-mile in 9: Point Scores. crowned today in the Afty.fifth Field Events. New Haven, 4-12; Bridgeport, 5-8. The complete point scores: annual intercollegiate A. A. A.| Shot put—Robert Hall, Southern Ml!nuv'llld 70-4 HMh:t’d' 12-1. Southera (‘7:11;;"";‘ 46 6-7. A. champlonships and their perform- | - o ’MJW 31’:"’:‘\;.;. i Hartfe ek : ,§ Panarive g g ford, 159 feet 2% inches. iy st % innings: ‘off Sher Corn Comnel 10%, # Track Events. Javelin ‘throw—(x) Kenneth Church. Binghamton, 1-2. “m ard, 18 3-1. 100-yard_dazh—(x) | Frank 111, California, 220 feet 11% inches (y). burg, 1010 ¥ Balls_Bc fi‘ g Time rsand 34 minu Three-Eye League. ‘Wykoff, Harvi - thern California, 9.8 seconds (y).! Hammer throw—(x) Connor, R b Tddie Tolan, Michi- | inches. Evansville, 3; Terre Haute, 2. Others postponed, rain. acl . rery Ver. "Boul, (D). Siade (8, ‘mlssonette @ o-! Minor Leagues o00000s0ommmtunol &l coomoronmmmme® %l cocoocscuiuvnonnn® Xl coorumnannuns® 5l cccomnococoracon® Bl coorancscscus? wl eaooee.a-eaoaoo..‘ nl sossemsssssco B ansssunsuscsmennl .Qfleefibfl.flr‘-uhflop Kansas City, 5-8; Milwaukee, 2-4, n seventh inning. 1 steam and, rm-‘d'm“ and, ai euc- twice, won it. Prom haume less and less RANKLIN FIELD, Philadelphia, 220-ylrd low hurdles—Ernest Payne, May 30 (#).—The champions |Southern California, 23.6 seconds (¥y). = oemnuwuioBRE el B8 Moo Sy » R Ry SRR A P RN ety me::;' 1-7, wu.u.wn. Los Afllcln. l-!: Por\‘.hnd. 3-3. ‘Hollywood, 7 Missicns, 2; Blcnnenw, San Prancisco, 13; Seattls, 6. Yale, 167 feet 2 Pole vault—Wil'lam Graber, South- Vol em California, 14 feet 1 inch . sounzern c-lflomin 474 seconds (z). ligh jump—(x) wuum O'Connor, run—Ben Eastman, Stan. CoXumM 6 feet 5 inches. 4. Bru%,‘ Richard Barber, South- run—Penrgse Hellowell, em Californ! 15 leet 3% inches (y). (y)!fle\vxc A record. (2) Equals world lndLO.LA.A. . record. (79) Bquals L. C. A. A A A Sesserebbsanareiiael [ —— cummmescotitiEausta it PO R b Savnt aw-souail And g‘er town, 6 each. mmm and ’Ooumbh. 5 each. Penn mll: and Bowdoin, 4 each. william and Mary. '3 Princeton, 2 3-7. ,C. C. N. %2 ichigan state and Bosion C 2 esch. i -z-euu. and Williams, ] a ] - - Texas League. Wichita Falls, 5; Fort Worth, 4. Palmetto League. rur—Joseph McCluskey, Ferdham, 9:26.6. 120-yard high hurdles—(l} Eugene|A. \Record, Harvard, 14.6 seconds. o g

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