w!w?l M K t- t f ' m m L AIDS PENN VICTORY Fermer WesfPhlla. H. S. Star Wins 2 Events Along With Levr and Brender il r';' &s 5 . m ..-.. 7r" -?-5' fikvel&nd Indians Hare te Meet ; Mack In First Intersec .' ' tienal Clash NBASEBAL MRNES IN NO-HIT CLASS ( - ilFTER nearly a month of sectional 'A i.1l Ini fllA ht Iftaviljlu tllfc DBneuBii - " "..., ...v. ' teams In the American and National eirculfa bc,n thc flr8t Efl8t V8, Wcst cl.Vhes today. All the clubs In Ban Jehnsen's clr edit are cchedulcd te perform, but 1n AeHeydler ring the Robins and Pirates done clash at Pittaburgli, all thc ether EMtern teams being en their way West. The flret Weitcrn club te make Its appearance here Is Trls Bpeaker ami his 'Oereland Indians. Speke and his nirly arrived this morning and arc euartewd at the Aldlne. They meet the jUekmen at Sblbe I'ark this afternoon, Tie visitors are In third place, Just uhalf fame ahead of Boten and Ohl Ohl eue, and' their record forlthe season lit trifle above the .500 mark. They hire v-en eleven eit of twenty-one lames played. Out of the ten defeats Htjttered against the Indians, rtlx were it the hands of the St. Leuis Browns. Anlnst Detroit and the White Bex Speaker's clan has by far thc better tf the games played te date. In the party that reached here today Vtre three catchers, eight pitchers, KTtn inflelders and five outfielders, In Siding Manager Speaker himself, .for t total 01 iwcmy-inrciHuj-rra. Almest Perfect Game Mlnsinx n perfect game by thc nnrrew Btrgln of a bnse en balls te "Cy" WH Bimiln the fifth, Jesse Barnes, hurling tee of the Glnntn find a here of the lut World Series, In in the ne-blt, no ran hall of fame today. vThe Phillies, blanked (1-0, were tiffed down with monotonous regular ity by Barnes, who fanned five am) al lowed only four balls te get te thc eur1 Mi.' Barnes' performance, thc sixth of its kind registered by n Olant pitcher Ames Itusic, Christy Mnthewsen (twice), Red Ames and .Tcff Tcsreau belttr. th,e ethers gave the McUraw men t commanding lead of three and a half times as they start West te open n (cries tomorrow with one of their rtrengest rivals, thc St. Leuis Cardinals. Duplicate Mays' Feat gam Jenes duplicated Carl Mays' two-hit allowance of the day before tad enabled the Yankees te easily bent Wuhlngten, 8-1. The victory kept the New Yerk club a step nhend of the Browns, vhe defeated Cleveland in a httry-hltting contest, driving three of Speaker's hurling' aces, Mulls, Morten and Bngby, from the box. Ty Cobb went en one of his old-time hatting rampages, collecting five hits, Including three doubles nml n homer, ln,as many times at bat, but Detroit lest te Chicago 0-7, although hitting Faber fer f-eventeen binglcs. Powell's ninth-inning home run gave Barten u 4-!i decision ever Brooklyn. Pittsburgh knocked Alexander from the box and hit three ether Cub twirlcrs hard for nn 11-5 victory. Deak hnd Cincinnati at his mercy except for enu Inning, and thc Cardinals wen handily, Topercer's hitting proving a feature. NAVY IMPRESSES IN SEASON'S FIRST RACE Middy Oarsmen Easily Defeat Princeton and Harvard in Var sity and Freshman Races The Middies are at It again. With A intercollegiate rowing hcunen In foil swing Dick Glenden's cightfl are for the third successive year proving tie right te being called the best of n. Saturday the future ensigns out rowed both Princeton and Hnrvard en Ike Charles Hlvcr in Bosten, and did it (0 convincingly thnt there was little doubt of the merits of the three crews. Six lengths separated the Middles worn the Tigers, who in-turn had two Injlths en the Hnrvrrfil eight. In the irtthmen race the Annapolis plebcs had Wand one-half lengths en Princeton, and the latter defeated the Crimson JJjJgatcrs by one-half length. The Middles had everything Saturday J weir first appearance of the tensen. two eights showed n smoothness ad rhythm In their bladcwerk that Bade the old-timers sit up nnd tnke wtjee. The powerful sweeps of the -Middy oarsmen sent their beat liter JwcInimlng ever the water. The varsity race was n runaway from "start, Hiid after the first mile It wed as though Princeton would be far in the rear. With -the Mld- i rS? far 0,,t Jn front the morale of ! Tigers crumbled, and It was only S -BUPThuinan effort in the Inst wee-fourths mile of the race that they able te row together and beat out .The downfall of Princeton makes fenn the favorite for the Childs Cup ft,Vt,tbl,Satijrdnyen Carnegie Lake. Jlumbla, the ether entrant, like Penu, gited en Saturday. Betli the Red and rt?M a.nd ,hc . Mernlngsldc Helghtb Jfi ,,ilvc "m(,e Hit times ever bn .iley C01lrse rt'htnncc ni should M'e it out Saturday. t JL2.t'ct,en', however, has been known na? Bri, fHk' n.n'1 i mny be tlmt wlth " wlftljc in the seating of the ini kJ?0."1 (1"rlnK the coming week they lumVu '' H,,nmj t0. ,ve Pen nl fo fe Jtntta cn ,n the C,,,,d, Cup tW.?,,.Wr,!,t' .t,,e ne'1 nml "l"0 ?ePJ L""tl;m fep the '!',c' th0 M nrsitv f f?r l"- All three eights, elhJu,i,er """' nl freriinwn Uve wf,e.,'.Vpiccpl,,:nt condition and . " " "-IIUIKIII, Earl Thomsen Fails te' Break Twe Hurdle Marks ln?heIl,m!l!,l,"S0,, OI'"")lu 'n'Hlen m coHcge ranks, fulled Saturday in " effertH te lower the recentt for hrdta Wnly .and Tventy-fivc-yurd BMie events. In the former "nl his own mark made last venr. Thm venty-live-ynrd event Ffc".w" t"-ftl of second Jf- in the recent Pcnn reluvs -yard event en the grass of 15 BEAT DARTMOUTH, 80-55 fTIHE University of Pennsylvania track team will face its biggest test of the season next Saturday at Ithaca, when It engages Jack Menkley's Cernell team. The meet was originally scheduled for Franklin Field, but.reconstructlen work there made It necessary te switch the meet te thc shores of Lake Cayuga. The Penn runners and field men will be handicapped from new en by net having their own trnck te practice en. Ceftch Robertsen wilt probably take his squad out te the Btrawbrldge & Clothier field dally. The track there Is net a quarter-mile one, but is said te be one of thp best In the city. The Held men will de their practicing en Museum Field, where they will have plenty of room te threw the' javelin, discus and shot. The jumpers and hurdlers will nccempany the runners. After the brilliant victory ever Dart mouth en Haturday, when Larry Brown nnd his mates wen n dual meet, 80 te fift, Penn's chances against Cernell have been greatly enhanced. The perform ances made bv Powers, the former West Philadelphia High Hchoel star, in the nurciics wasnotewerthy. Running as n varsity man In n meet for the first time. Powers skipped across the 120 high and the !0 low for first nlnces. His time in the former. IB 4-5 seconds, and In the latter, 25 3-5 sec-J uuun, nrp hoi vrry mm, pui iut :iiuusii te mhke him dangerous te Kimball, thc Cernell star. Rese Makes Great Jump Albert Rese, who has been steadily improving in the running bread jump, made his best leap of his career at Hanover. He skimmed through space a distance of 23 feet 7V6 inches. If the Chester lad continues his pres ent improvement Penn will have a first place winner in thc event In thc inter inter celleglatcs, for the mark made by Rese en Saturday was the best turned in by n celleginn this season. Beets Lever showed he Is returning te form bv remDinc home n winner in thp 100 and 220. The former he covered ! in 10 1-15 seconds, nnd thc latter in 22 4-5. fthnttuck, who rnn as a mem- I ber of the 440-yard relay team, mushed second in thc century, with Altmnler, another member of the relav team, in a dead hent for second with Rny Jack. Geerge Brender, the former Brooklyn Polytechnic star, marked his first per fermance for the varsity by winning ( first plnbe in two events. The husky sll-nrnund stnr heaved the 10-pound i shot 42 feet 0 inches, nnd threw the javelin 107 feet 11 Vt Inches. The latter mark was twenty feet shorter than the new record established bj Brender in the Penn relays. Brown Wins Mile Captain Larry Brown, after n hard race with Sherburne, of Dartmouth, captured the mile In 4 minutes 34 4-fi seconds, net the fastest time thc Red nnd Blue skipper lias mnue tins season, ; but speedy considering track cendl- i tlens. Den Head lest the two-mile run br a few feet after a sensational finish with Yeung, of Dartmouth. Johnny Helden's defeat In the quarter was a big surprise, considering the time, fil j seconds. Kd. McMullcn surprised by romping home n winner In the half ' ahead of ueorge Jiereuim, who nun ie be content with third place. The time was 2 minutes 1 4-6 seconds. Frank, Penn's l."2-pound hammer thrower, edged in with a win in ins favorite event when he heaved the pellet 133 feet 5 Inches. Easy for Princeton Princeton scored almost as easy a trnck victory ever Yale as did Penn ever Dartmouth. The Tigers rolled up 71 1-3 points te 48 -'-a for tne Kits. The times made by thc winners in almost every event were better than theso made nt Hanover. Stevenson wen the 440 In 40 0-10; Jehnsen, of Princeton, thc half. In 1 minute 57' ::.1I! DeubIbs. of Yale, the mile, in i 4 minutes 20 3-10 seconds, within one- I tenth of the record. ! The day marked flic real opening e t the outdoor trnck season with meets nil ever the KnBt and Seuth. With ' Jimmy Patterson, who ran for Penn fresh last yeur in the stellar role with three first places, Colgate wen the trl- , angular meet with Pittsburgh and) Syracuse. i Allan iicinncn wim wins iu uie quarter and half, nnd Larry Shields in the mile nlded Penn State in defeating the University of Virginia. The result of thc ether meets follew: Lnfnvette bent Bucknell, Rutgers smothered Lehigh. Brown trounced Bowdoin. Stevens humbled ('. ('. N. Y.. West Virginia surprise! Washington and Jeffersen, nnd Union trounced Trinity. MACKS WIN EXHIBITION Athletjcs Hit Hard In 10-8 Victory Over Newark Club Newark. N, .1., Mny 8. Hammering out a tetnl of nineteen bnse hits, Cennie Mack's Philadelphia Athletics registered n 10-tn-H lctery ever the Newark Benrs here ycktcrday in nn exhibition game. , . . The Bears jumped home from Buffalo nnd left immediately nfter their game with the Athletics for Terente. In rlmldl in tln Mackmen's base-hit bar- raise were n pnir of home runs by Miller, two triples by jsrneer. u triple and it two-begger by Heuscr and a triple by Welch. W. AND J. LOSES WEST Star Track Athlete May Be Missing for Rett of Season Washington, Pa., Mny . C'onstcr C'enstcr C'onstcr natien was caused In track circles at Washington and JefferFen when It was learned thut Charles West, stur Negro athlete, would likely be missing from competition for the remainder of the season. West, who iinlnhed third in the pen tathlon at the Penn games, uns de clared Ineligible a few hours before thc team left for Morgnntewn te compete with West Virginia In a dual meet. Reach A. A. Signs Players The Reach A. A.'hns signed "Uescy" Devlin, who pitched for Stetson Inst ear; Oetz, of Hagerstown, Md. ; Shulta, of Spring City j Moffett brothers of Illusion, and McDcrmett, of thc old Stetson Club. Reach is n first clas.s traveling club, and can be secured through Art Summers, 1524 Chestnut street, or by addressing J. II. Dnlley, 710 Belgrade street. Phene Kensington 1301 W. MIK IIKMF.VKH IN KI.Ari'EKH Minn Anna Jarvla, the feunJr of Mether n Day, tell why hf believe In the flapper also ten llilnis rery irlrl uf fourteen wheuUI knew In a full-pene Interview lhlcli up nam in the Uln Section of next flun- day's Fi'Dtie Lispess. "Mane it a Habit." -," ': I TS- v & anVfXH && f RnBS ft, Dreadcastin A New Recerd for Philadelphia ftrw: 5v WfWfM :t N the StijL-'JLask, The Time Sat, May 6, 1922 The Place TRULY WARNER 1307 Market St. The Recerd 10,000 hats in one day in one store; A Recetd Breaking Radie Carnival When I sent out the Cede Signal Q S T last Saturday, which was a General Call for "All Persons te Stand By" and get the Styl-Flash, I expected a rush, but I didn't leek for a riot. I guess every Live-Wire in Philadelphia caught this Flash, plugged in his Loud Speaker, and invited all his friends te "listen in," because the response resulted in a Record Recerd Breaking Radie Carnival and my store was a Receiving Station for all Philadelphia. Last Friday night at 8.30, W G L, one of the most pow erful Broadcasting Stations in Philadelphia, in a Style Fore cast, said that "The most startling . new style feature intro duced this Season was a White Sennit Sailor with a thick edge te the brim." This Style Prophet must have referred te the Styl-Flash, as it is the only hat in Philadelphia with a light Radie Amplified Edge. Incidentally, the Styl-Flash has the "edge" en any new style introduced this year, and was responsible for my Phila delphia store making a New Recerd for the Opening Day of the Straw Hat Season and breaking the World's Recerd for the number of straw hats sold in any one store in any one day. The enthusiasm of the crowd was contagious. Even the salesmen who had all waited en mere than a hundred cus tomers apparently enjoyed the evening performance as much as the matinee. Although I was in the store during the whole perform ance, it was impossible te speak te you all and thank everyone personally for coming te my Radie Party, se I want te take this opportunity te publicly express my appreciation. I thank you all 10,000 times. TRULY WARNER P. S. If it was impossible for you te "listen in" last Sat urday, I just want te remind you that we are going te have a continuous performance every day this week. ITASe vwauQwari TmmqygmmmmmBm nxtts Mrs Kjer 1307 Market Street (Opposite Wanamaker's) The Greatest Men's Hat Stere in the World met UMm -?$4i :&'t Jrl flit e I K-i a if ' HA li. ."k . 1. T' ; i i & vV .' 'en r- ,-vf- i iii 1i i awatvaaVaWSelHHiJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJM' .'AwWm r ur " "" - --,--.. .,. . ''.r"1 r.ti t M'm rVwTfJPii l ui m ? S k!Ht-43ej HHHIIIIIiiH .iL 1 - 4 mm e. . , . . fll 1 J J J S. if. i t f i r -i . j. " t w -", ' jiv 'tj?. .'r-r 'wc -''-- rytjf ft v. ifc. mzwftMt i4j.ja.f'"'"J i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers