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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 33

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Brooklyn, New York
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Brooklyn daily Eagle Financial Puzzles News Features by Eagle Sporting Experts SECTION 1 NEW YORK CITY, SUNDAY, APRIL 3, 1932 TEN CENTS Dodgers Win Over Indians, 7 to 5 Yankees and Giants Lose; N. Y.A. C. Trio Sets World Swim Mark Miss Orcutt Gains Title EaseBaH, Golf, Racing, Athletics, Swimming Boxing, Other Sport3 Exciting Play in Rugby Contest at Polo Grounds i iwwMWwryww jj wwwwimni. i w.iuuij.uw.

xmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmn Giant Mungo Master Of Indians, Despite Wildness at Start Crabbe Gains Third Crown InA.A.U.Meet Leonard, Walter Spence and Kojac Shatter Relav Record By THOMAS HOLMES Slafl Correspondent ol tht Faqle New Orleans, La April 2 Traditional exponents of tin-orthodoxy on the base paths that they are, your Brooklyn Dodgers rarely have excelled some of the. traffic Jams they perpetrated in fun loving New Orleans here this afternoon. But they had the hitting and they had the pitching and they managed to win the first of a two-game series with Roger Peckinpaugh's Cleveland Indians by 7 to 5. Van Lingle Mungo, that glowering 20-year-old giant from South Carolina again fittingly demonstrated that no set of batters are going to fatten up their averages on his hard- A i iW rHn St.S-y irv 1 yx 15 hopping fast ball. He pitched th i iiiiiiiin iMiniM utimi mi mama iw mm arriirrnii' nmmanai mfimt 'Wni iwnrnrBr '-(amtiirMn iMiiwwfMiiriwwwmiMiiitiiiriH Rugby Club (left) shown ready to catch the ball after it Harvard yesterday at the Polo Grounds.

Whitney, Harvard, was thrown by Jack James, former Poly Prep and Princeton is seen blocking James. Allison and ess Finalists In Houston Tennis Tourney New Haven, Apri'. 2 (JP) Clarence (Buster) Crabbe, husky Los Angeles swimmer, wo nhis third title in the National Senior A. A. U.

wtmming championships by beat-In a. fast field tonight in the 500-yard freestyle race. Leonard and Walter Spence, brothers, and George Kojac brought a new world's record to the New York Athletic Club in the 300-yard medley relay during a preliminary heat. The trio clipped 1 1-5 seconds off the old time of 3 minute 3 3-5 seconds in the Yale Pool. I lapp rai uui The individual competition produced an upset when Austin Clapp of the Los Angeles A.

C. defending champion, failed to qualify for the finals in the 500-yard freestyle event. He finished last in his bracket of four men in the poor time of 6 minutes 6 1-5 seconds. Another defending champion, Mickey Riley ef the Los Angeles A. fared badly in the qualifying round of the high board diving.

He was out scored by Dick Degener of Michigan, who tallied 150.32 to lead the and Harold "Dutch) Smith of the Los Angeles A. C. Riley, holder of the low board diving crown, was given 137.88, and Smith piled up 140.14. Shade and Slaughter To Box in Milwaukee Milwaukee. April 2 IJP) The Cream City Athletic Club today an-rounced Dave Shade of New York Id Sammy (Kid) Slaughter, Terre i.ute.

nave agreea to neaa-line a fight, card here April 11. The agreed weight was 160 pounds. It had been planned to match Shade and Frankie Battaglla. but terms rould not be arranged -to satisfy Battaglia. White Sox to Train At Pasadena, Cal.

Chicago, April 2 P) The Chicago White Sox will train at Pasadena, next year, president J. Louis Comiskey announced today. The Sox have trained in Texas since 1A17, wit the exception of one vear. but during the past two sea sons have encountered poor weather. Orookside Park, a well-equipped baseball plant, will be the base of operations.

r.RinnERs who bloom in SPRING Eight hundred candidates are expected out for Spring football practice at Notre Dame University. HUNTER ATHLETE Miss Mary Silbert, 1466 Fulton Is one of the leading athletes at. Hunter College. She is the captain of the undefeated fencing team, a member of the field hockey unit, tennis team and the horseback riding In addition. Miss Silbert Is a feature writer for Bulletin, the college publication, a member of the Senior Hop Commit-'re and the chairman of thp Student Exchange.

Whrn Miss Silbert left the Brooklyn she was swarded a pin for outstand-ng service to the school. II 1U i A Liill? Scalping Brooklvn Cleveland thrh Bbth Cohen. It 4J 3 0 0 1 .1 0 0 erick.rfcf 5 0 0 3 0 Porier.rf 32 1 10 StriDO.lb 311 UOAverlll.rf 40 1 2 0 Howell. lb 100 410 3 3 Wilson el 131 1 0 0 2 12 1 Boone. 3 1 i 4 0 Kmm 3b 4 0 0 2 4 Wrljht.M 4 0 2 1 2 8ewell.r 4 0 0 S3 Blde.

1 00 0 1 Mont.aiie.j, 1 10 13 lnello 2h 101 2 OiConntllY.B 20 1 0 0 2 0 0 3 1 Plnn.lb 3 01 0 31 Richards, 3 11 3 lj Lopez. 1 0 0 2 0 Munxo.p 3 0 0 0 0 Qutnn.p 1 00 0 0 Brown, 20 1 11 Totals 3 11127 81 Totals 3t 9 27 15 Brooklyn 0 1 3 I 1 1 00 07 Cleveland 30010010 03 Errors -Sewell 3i. Finn. Slade. Tan-haw hlta Richards.

Jamieaon. Finn. Boone. Three-has hita Strtpo. Boone.

Stolen bases Montague, Cohen. Double plav Fin nlo Thompson to Howetl. Base on hallo- Off Mungn. 7: off Connally. off Brown, 1: off Qutnn.

1. Struck otil Bv Munno, by Connally, by Brown, by Qninn. 1. Ruth's Homer With 2 on Not to Win Memphis 'Chicks' Find Ruffing, Brown Easy, Winning hy 7-6 Score Babe's Sock Fails New York Memphis ab a' ab a Combs.rf 411 3 0Hmel.cf 412 2 0 3 1 2 2 2( Weatland sa .100 15 Rulh.ir 4 12 0 0 rtrese ii ai jo Oehrlg.lb 3 0 2 4 2 512 2 0 I ary.lb Cro.setfl.aa RiifftnR.p Brown. a Selkirk sni Rirrnionio 14lu 4 0 0 2 2 Oilli.2b 5 12 10 Baho.Sb III Berser.c 4 0 2 3 1 4 0 0 0 3 112 11 10 0 10 1 0 0 0 0 3 12 0 0 0 10 00 tin no oooi o'e; Tolal, 33(1 12 24 37 7 14 37 10 aBattert for Ruffing In 8th Inning.

hRan lor Mosa in 8ih inning. New York 00203010 O-O MemphU 01003012 7 Errors bv Croset.tl. Jorgen. Brown. Oii-lls.

Beck. Two-base hits Penton. Ber-ger. Kelly Reese. Hutcheson.

Hamel. Three-baae hits Hutcheson. Home runs Ruth. CrosfttU Stolen bases Reese, Rulh. Double nlays Westllng to Glllis to Pen-Ion: Bobo to Glllis to Penton.

Bases on balls- Off Beck. Kellv. Rufllng. 1. Struck out By Beck.

Ruffing. Kelly, Special to The Eagle Memphis, April 2 When the Yankees collect only a few runs at the end of nine Innings of labor and toil. Manager Joe McCarthy complains about the insufficiency of their attack. And then when the Yanks step out and get themselves some runs, the discovery is made that the pitching staff has bogged down and the Yankees are defeated. Which leaves Mr.

McCarthy in a bit of dilemna as he pilots his charges Northward For the first time in a week the I Yankees did some real hitting here toaay andi also tne time ln a week, they wound up on the short end of the score, the Memphis Chickasaws walking off with a 7 to 8 victory. In their two previous starts, against the House of David and Birmingham, the Rnppert Rifles were impotent at the bat, but man-' aged to win on the strength of fine pitching by Johnny Murphy and Lefty Gomez. Today the attack boomed forth with its usual vigor. Babe Ruth connecting for his fourth home run of the Spring and personally prodding across five Yankee runs. The other was accounted for by young Frank Cros-etti, with a 400-foot homer over the high left field barrier.

All For Naught All this display of power, however. went, for naught, because neither Charley Ruffing nor Walter Brown could keep the "Chicks'' in their place. Brown, who pitched the eighth nntnc th. nin r'. nm- frame on one hit, a triple and two errors, one his own.

Fenton's double and Berger's single, the first of three hits for that gentleman, got Memphis off in Please turn to Pace Sandhill Polo Club Wins Memorial Cup i Plnehurst, N. C. April 2 iTi The Jack Latting Memorial Cup was; won today by the White team of the Sandhill Polo Club, which de- feated the Blue team of the same I i I I first six innings, rallied after ft three-run slap in the face In the first frame caused mainly by hl wildness and although occasionally wild later on pitched Impressively. He gave sevn bases on balls but allowed only four hits and was in front by the time old John Piciw Quinn came in to finish the game. The Dodgers were again mean at bat.

All but two of their ten-bas hits off Sgt. George Connally and Clint Brown were solidly whacked. VAN LOSES TRACK OF HIS TEMPER Mungo's temper was hot and hi control was not in the first. Inning and Cleveland rolled away from th barrier to ft three-run lead. Chick Jamleson doubled and Porter walked.

Earl AverlH hit a Ion fly to Wilson, Hodapp walked, filling the bases. Mungo used up a lot of energy pitching to Bruce Connatlter, Cleveland's rookie first baseman. Van was in the hole at three to one. -He burned over a second strike. Mungo's big one was his Sunday fast ball and the other rookie took his Sunday slash at the pitch.

A rollicking triple to the lence in center chased the three runs over. Mungo in his menacing rage, struck out Willie Kamm and pulled out of the Inning without further trouble. In the second spasm, the Dodger filled the bases with one out when old Sergeant Connallv struck a. wild spell and passed Wilson. Cucclnello and Finn.

Here the Dodgers began a comedy base running serial that confused themselves and the spectators. Had they not. als confused Catcher Luke Sewell, they'd not have scored even one run in what promised to be a big Inning. ONE IN" THE NECK PUTS ONE IN THE BAG Wilson succeeded in getting himself hung up off third base. As Sewell threw down to third the hall struck Hack in the back of his broad neck and carooned Into left field.

Wilson scored and Cuccinello took third. Finn, for unknown reasons, didn't leave first. When Paul Richards flied out to Avertll for the second out, Cucclnello dashed away from third with the ball still in the air and had to go back to tag up. By that tftne It was too late to score. Then Cuccinello capped the climax by being caught off third bas and thrown out by Sewell.

But the Dodgers looked as though ihey wanted to win in the third. Cohen was on base as the result of a pass, two were out and Connelly's ears were abruptly pinned back. Stripp tripled, Wilson, Wright and Cuccinello blasted forth sue- cessive singles. Three runs and tht Dodgers were in front. Richards doubled and scored on Cohen's single In the fourth.

Ike Boone's triple and Wright's singl scored another ln the fifth. Another opportunity for a big inning here, but Thompson popped lito a double play trying to bunt off Clint Brown, a new pitcher. Al Cohen singled in the sixth, stole second, reached third on an infield out and scored when Sewell threw wild trying to pick him off. MUNGO'S LAST ONE SHOULDN'T COUNT Mungo pulled himself together, nobly after that first Inning. HI wildness was periodic, but he was so fast that the Indians couldn't do much with him.

The run Cleveland scored In the fourth was due more to a bad decision at second base than any other reason. With two out, Montague seemed an easy out when he tried to steal second, but a rookie umpire waved him safe and eligible to score on Jamieson's dou- ble. Quinn stepped to the box in the seventh and was tagged for on run ln closing inning. Brown hpld Dodger secondaries safe for tn remainder of the game. Pressed lot of ball players I ve ever Everybody from Carey down is worried half sick over reports of Bissonette critical condition.

Carey finds his way blocked on practically everv worth while deal for a first baseman. Hack Wilson had long work-out before the game and was so exhausted by the time he singled in the third Inning that, he asked tt be relieved. Ike Boone went to th (Please Turn to Page Jt Pinehurst Golfers Beat All-South Team 1 today, Ivor Williams, New York football star, in game with IM SHII Too Sick To Receive 'iilor Inquiry at the Hospital for the Ruptured and Crippled, where Del Bissonette, wounded first-sacker of the Dodgers is making slow recovery from an operation on his heel for a torn tendon, revealed that Bissonette is still too sick to receive visitors. It had been reported earlier In the day that Bissonette would be out of baseball for the rest of the season, quoting Dr. Armitage Whitman.

But the doctor said that he had been misquoted. The injured athlete was only In drydock for two months, "Mr. Bissonette isn't seeing any one," was all the gentlemanly youth at the hospital would say. The same word came down from the sick room directly. Young-Hintoii Win Casino Squash Title Capture Doubles Crown From Thayer -Rusch in Five-Game.

Match form TvT Vnnnir won hi. sprnnd jorin M. Young won his second squasn racqueLS cnampionsnip oi the Heights Casino yesterday when paired with Longstreet Hlnton to defeat H. K. Thayer and R.

O. Rasch for the doubles title. Young, who also wo nthe singles championship of the club, and his partner outlasted their rivals in a lengthy five-game match, ft 15, 1513, 1513, 17 18, 15 B. This is the first year that a doubles title has been decided at the Casino, as previous to this year only singles matches could be played. However.

Young and Hin- ton demonstrated yesterday that thev were real i-hamnions when their excellent team play and court covering stood out. Thayer and Rasch took the first game rather easily, but when Young and Hinton settled down to hard hitting and drop shots, they hammered out the next two games. But in the fourth game the Thayer-Rasch combine made another strong bid and carried the game to extra points before they were able to win. I nthe rubber game the new champions were too steady and they rattled off points in streaks of deadly hitting. Postponements Pnstnnnements ruined tlie big dav of sauash tennis that was planned for vesterdav at the Cres cent.

A. C. Edward R. Lartgan had to put off his semi-final round match with William J. Hall, while Jimmy Reid had to postpone his professional exhibition against Tom Iannlcelll, the runner-up for the world's open tile, until this Thursday Burdett H.

O'Connor, the defending champion will meet the winner of the Larigan-Hall match later in the week. Ernest W. Arnold went around ahead of the field ln the Class tournament yesterday after coming within one point of defeat. Against K. B.

Meurer, Arnold trailed 14 9 in the third game, but ln a great rally ran off elsht straight points to win the match. The scores of the match were, 915. 153, 1714. Two first round matches in the tournament were also played vesterdav. A.

F. Adams defeated W. T. Hanley. 158, 215, 157.

while Donald Lawson conquered J. R. Kiernan. 17 IS. 152 In the Class tournament.

Danny Tobin. the favorite to win the title. mad his round start bv beating Wiiam r. Koch, 150, 15. Long Putts Win North South Crown on 18th Mrs.

Opal Hill Defeated as Jersian Recovers Accuracy on Greens Plnehurst, N. April 2 (A) Sinking putts of more than 20 feet to win the 17th and 18th holes, Maureen Orcutt, Englewood. N. star, overcame a one-hole deficit to defeat Mrs. Opal Hill of Kansas City today for the North and South championship.

Her one-up victory brought her the crown for the second successive year. Down from the start, Miss Orcutt forced the play with a chance-taking game all the way. Although she kept the match squared often, she was never ahead until the final hole. Mrs. Hill's uncanny ability to sink long putts enabled her to win several holes which it appeared Miss Orcutt would capture.

To overcome her putting jinx, which finally left her on the last holes. Miss Orcutt gambled frequently on long second shots, playing them over traps to the greens. Third Victory The victory today was the third of the Winter season for Miss Orcutt and gave her top honors for the year's early campaign. A par four gave Mrs. Hill the first hole as Miss Orcutt's drive was bunkered and the Missourian canned a 25-footer on the second for a half after Miss Orcutt had spanned a wide trap with her second shot and was on the green and had the hole apparently won.

Again on the third Miss Orcutt chanced a long brassie and cleared the traps stretching in front of the green to score a four and even the match, but Mrs. Hill won the fifth with a par three and earned a half on the sixth by passing a stymie. Miss Orcutt won the seventh as Mrs. Hill's drive was tiapped. but dropped the eighth when another long biaF.sie found a trap.

They passed the turn all square after Miss Orcutt's par four won the ninth. Mrs. Hill won the tenth and halved the eleventh and twelfth. Caution Costly A trapped drive cost Mrs. Hill the fmtr illinmiui, uui.

jiic uo.uu tcenth and fifteenth. Miss Orcutt i 1 In ttrirt thi ime fourteenth as Mrs. Hitl drive was trapped and her second shot was Short, DUt MISS urcuu. pmicu cau tiously and short. The 15th was halved in fours and Mrs.

Hill went one up on the 16th. where Miss Orcutt's putt for a half rimmed the cup. The long-hitting New Jersey girl stretched her second to the edge of the green on the long 17th and holed a 2S-foot putt for a birdie to win the hole. Gallant Recovery A cross wind caught Miss Omitt's drive on the 18th and It, carriPd into a trap, but she. made a long shot out to the left of the green, leaving herself a difficult chip over a trap which she carried and f.ank a long roller for a par four as Mrs.

Hill missed her try for a half. Miss Orcutt's medal score was 82 and Mrs. Hill 84. The cards: Woman's par. out 4554434 5 4 Mtw Orcutt.

nut Ulltnit Mr. Hill. 44 Woman's par. In 4 3 5 5 3 4 4 43!) 77 Ml Orrutt. in 5 5 5 4 4 4 3 4-30- Mrs, Hill.

In4 5 4 4 4 4 5--40- R7 44JI.84 MISSOURI BOWLER ROLLS 300 St. Joseph. Pi R. J. Cowell.

i St. Joseph bowler, rolled a perfect I Ural game as the second of a three-game series, the only one recalled bv enthusiasts here. Then, cracking under th strvin, he toppled i 187 in the final game. Seals Outplay McGrawmen in Fog by 10 to 5 San Franciscans Get to Solverson Early-Giant Hits Scattered Seals Perform Giant I Seals ab a1 ah a Crllz.2b 5 0 0 1 4 Donovan.ct 5 0 1 4 0 Koenecke If 5 12 10 Oalan.ao 4 11 0 3 Linm.cf.3b 5 0 2 2 1 Oarlb di.2b 5 0 0 4 5 Terrv.lb 500 I Keesev.lb 4 1110 0 Otl.rf 2 1 0 3 0: Hunt.rJ Jackson. sa 42 1 2 1 Wera.3b 3 12 10 3 3 0 1 2 4 2 3 4 0 4 12 2 0 10 1 0 0 2 0 1 12 211 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Vernez.3b 00 0 0 1 8ulik.lt Heaiv.c 4 1 2 5 0 Penebsky.e 10 1 0 2 WiU by.p 3 0 21 0 Zinn 1 0 0- 0 TTaBler.rf 10 0 0 2 xWard 100 OO Prout lb 0 0 0 0 0 Moonev.p Allen.

cf xHoftan Chaplin. xxLteber Salveson.p Total 37 10 24 Volalj 37 10 13 27 13 xHogan bAlted for Mounev In 4rh. XTLIeber balled lor Chaplin In Sth. xWard hailed for Keenev In 8th. Score by InnlngG: Olanta 0 0 1 2 1 0 0 1 05 Seals 0 4 1 0 0 1 4 0 10 Errors Crlti, Jackson.

WilloujhbT. Innings pitched Bv Mnonev, bv Wil-loujhby. by Chaplin. by Salveson. 1: by Zinn.

5. Winning pitcher Wil-loiighby. Loaing pitcher Mooney. At hat Off Moonev. 19; Willoughby.

21: Chaplin, 15; Zinn. 14. Runs scored Off Moonev. Willoughby. Chaplin 5.

Runs fresnonsible for Mooney, Willoughby, Chaplin, 4: Zlnn 1. 8truck out By Mooney, Willoughby. 8al-veson. Zinn. 1.

Basea on balls Off Mooney, 1: Willoughby. Chaplin, Zinn. 3: Salveson, 2. Stolen basea Oalan, Two-base hits Peneb.skv, Jackson. Liiidurom, Zinn.

Praairr. Koenecke. Runs llattea In- sunk. 3: Peneboky. Wl.

Crlta, Jackson, Allen. Llndalrom zlnn prier, Healv. Umpires- Brennat and Genshleau. lime of bame 1:53. Speciul to The Eagle San Francisco, April 2 It may be that the San Francisco Seals could better find their way around in the fog that rolled in through the Golden Gates this afternoon, but whatever the explanation they played more baseball than the Giants, and they won the afternoon's ball game as easily as thev uiiniiia I th 5 store-, Boss sought to check the S'8 wlth the lefthanded Jim i Mooney.

but the. Bridgeport young ster did not come fclose to qualify ing. The Seals started on the road to victory with a four-run assault in the second inning and added another to their tally as they went along. Had Chance Till Seventh At that the Giants, by dint of some uphill labor had a chance to win as late as the seventh inning, when the Seats teed off on Tiny Chaplin and Increased their run mn hTdno Aching to This speak of this Soring, and it would appear that his Polo Grounds career i is about to end. Johnny Solverson, collegian from Los Angeles, des unea jor nnuxeput finished on the mound for the Giants.

Leo Penebsky. the Frisco catcher, was the most potent willow wielder for the Seals. His oair of two-bag gers drove nomt lour ni. The Giants meanwhile tagged the veteixns, Claude Willoughby and Jimmy Zinn, for 10 hits, but couldn't group them In any one inning. Cubs Sell Bell Ml atlt- 10 ljOUlSVlIie VIUO Los Angeles, April 2 Chi- cago Cuba today Leer Bell veteran third baseman, to Louisville of the American Association, and sent pitcher Jonnny Welch to the same club on option.

Bell, who was a member of the 1926 World Champion f. Louis Cardnials. was purchased by the Cubs from the Boston Braves for the 1930 season. Welch came to the Cubs several years ago, Reading League, and was farmed out to of the International Houston, Texas, April 3 (Pi Two Texans, Wilmer Allison of Austin, and Jake Hets of Rice Institute, qualified today for final play in the Houston Invitation tournament. Hess, using an almost unbeatable service, eliminated the giant Lester Stoeffen of California, in a long, grinding match, 3 6, 8 3, 6 2, 1412.

In the uppr bracket, Allicon former national intercollegiate champion and seeded number 3 in the tournament, had comparatvely little trouble in defeating Jimmv Quick of Dallas. 83. 1, 57, 62. The finals will be played tomorrow. Stoeffen, whose dashing play made him a gallery favorite, started Miss Morrill Wins Indoor Tennis Title Then Pairs With Mrs.

Van Ryn, Dr. Caner to Take Douhles Crowns Brookline, April 2 () National tennis championships came In bunches today for Marjorie Morrill of Deadham, the nation's sixth ranking woman player, who registered a "grand slam" In the three finals of the women's indoor title at the Longwood covered courts. This high-ranking player, who has spent six years striving for a senior national championship, gained her first such honor by dethroning Marjorie Sachs of Cambridge, defending champion in the singles competition, in a hard-fought overtime match by scores of 36, 62, 62. Then she teamed up with Mrs John Van Ryn of Philadelphia, whe ranks eighth nationally, to turn back Mrs. George W.

WlRhtman and Sarah Palfrey, the Brookline players who have held the national indoor doubles crowns for the past lour years, by scores f6 3, 6 0. Mixed Doubles Winner Miss Morrill, after a brief rest, returned to the court with Dr. G. Colket Cane of Bookline as her partner, and they gained the national mixed doubles titles by de- l2 Dpdhflm slam" is the second in the history of women's Indoor tennis. Mrs.

Wight man had similar success In 1927, for after she defeated Margaret Blake of Lenox for that year's indoor singles title, she annexed the doubles titles with Mrs. John B. Jessup and then teamed with G. P. Gardner Jr.

of Boston to gain the mixed doubles final and a clean sweep of the Indoor events. Shift in Tactics A sudden shift of tactics early ln the second set enabled Miss Morrill to wrest the singles crown from Miss whose lefthanded forehand drive were effective enough toRain the opening set. during which Miss Morrill traded shots from the base lines. Th Dedham girl softened her attack, after losing the first game in the second set, and this type of play baffled Miss Sachs, forcing her to bang the easy returns Into the net or out of bounds. Miss Morrill well, blasting awav win the first three games quickly.

In the second S3t, however, Hess' meticulous service got going and he started a powerful forehand stroke that had not seemed to click previously. As the Rice player's game improved, StoefTen's progressively weakened. He appeared unable accurately to judge the force of his blows and was driving out frequently. In the back-breaking fourth set. which went to 26 games.

Hess had him netting time and again. During that set. Incidentally, the. serv-ce of each was broken only once. In the match with Quick.

Allison was not troubled particularly, save In the third set, where Quick's lobbing was too much for him. 4 Home Runs Beat Mackmen By 84 Score Hurst and Whitney of Phils Each Connect With 2 Four-Baggers Sp'cial to Tlie Eagle Philadelphia, April 2 Burt Shot-ten's Phillies toppled the Athletics, 8 4, in the first game of the city championship here this afternoon. Don Hurst and Pinkey Whitney hit two home runs each, thereby accounting for all the eight runs made by the Phillies. Phil Collins and Ray Benge pitched for the winners, while Joe Bowman and Sugar Cain shouldered the burden for the Athletics. Hurst hit his first home run with two on base in the third inning, and clouted his second with one on in the fifth.

Whitney started the home run derby when he smacked one in the first inning and scored behind Hurst. He connected again in the eighth with the bags empty. Phillies I Alhletirs abrhoa ebrhosi Mallon 310 3 1 Bishop 2b 50 1 32i OD-c( 4 1 0 3 0 5 0J 3 0 Klein. rt 3 1 0 2 0' Madlet kl.c al 5 3 i nurpt.io .1 ti rtimmon.ii uui Ke.lf 401 1 0 Cramer.lf 0 0 0 0 0 Whitney 4 2 2 2 3 Roettger.ib 4 to Birtell.ftft 4 0 0 3 0 Coleman df 3 12 2 0 MrCurtiv.c Collin, Benge. 3 0 1 4 0 Dvkts.31.

42 1 5 atio o.wtiiiamvja 412 2 i 100 So! oo' afochrant 0 00 0 0 Tola) 31 8 7 27 5 Tnlalu 35 4 It 27 13 a Batted for Bowman In 4th inning. PhilUM 0 23 02 00 1 a 1 Athletic 00020200 04 Krrnr By Modlffki. Two-bus hit Hurst. Dykes. Williams.

Thre-bfe hit Lee. Hornn run Whitnev Hurst fliolen base Klein. Re on hall--Off Bowmen. Collin. 1: Cain.

2: Benjie. 1. Btrnck ont By Bowman. Cnlllns, 3: Cain. Benge.

1. Hit by piichr Bv Bowman: Bartell. wild pitch Collin. Umpires Quinn and Atilltvan. Diesel's Contract Is Not Renewed Agua Calienle, April 2 (IP) Leo Diegel's contract as the Agua Callente Golf Club professional has not been renewed.

At a meeting of directors of the Agua Calient Company the matter of Diegel's contract, which expired today, was left among the "unfinished business." It will come up for consideration again in the late Fall. In the meantime. it nia. TUorl tf rtjjriiu iiir ouuiuiri i (iiupn 1911 iiir the major tournaments. Griselle Knocks Out I MacDonald in First than two minutes of the first round of their match at the Palais des Sporu tonight.

1 i i I lj ran off five straight games for a Paris. April 1 (PI Maurice 1 lead and then held her service selle. French heavyweight, stopped In the eighth game to square the Angus Mardonald of Canada in less organization. 9 goals to 6. I Plnehurst.

April 2 For Lambert Splane of Detroit, who! the tenth successive, vear. the Pine-scored four goals: M. V. Rlocock ot hurst, golf team defeated an All-Darirn. who scored three; South team represen'ng nthee Gould Shaw of Nw York and Oor- Southern resons by st ore of 1.1 tit don Cameron rf rtnehuriv rom-! in Nassau foursome matches her match.

During the deciding set Miss Morrill continued her soft, at-' tack, but varied it to pcection. I posed the winning team,.

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