Page Foot PENN STATE TRACK MEN EASILY DEFEAT COLGATE (Continued from first page) McMahon finished In the order mimed in puttin',' the shot. Beck winning with I thiow uf 39 feet I inch. The other Time men to roil up nine points for tiie Bine ami White were Taylor, Dem ining and Newcomer. Captain Dem ining led the race until the* half way point u-as reached. At that time Tay lor began to show a little more speed m 3*5 seconds. By win ning these two events the Penn State runners advanced their score eighteen points, making the score at this time 35 to 10. Tice won the pole vault by clearing tin* bar at 11 feet 6 inches, and Parent w*.» the high Jump with a spring of 5 fvet C 1-1 inches. ltomlg Breaks Kecoril The most spectacular race of the af ternoon was the two mile race in which “Jilondy" Komig lowered the college re cord by 12 1-5 seconds. This record was formerly held by B. D. Watts ’l2 whose time was 9 minutes -11 1-5 sec onds. Komig' finished the race in 9 in bin le.s 29 seconds flat. At the very Mart of the race he set a fast pace which he maintained throughout. Af ter the first lap he began to forge a- Inad considerably with Cooper follow ing in second place, Snyder In third and 15. W. Callahan of Colgate In fourth place. During the second lap Callahan steadied himself and began to pick up speed, passing Snyder ami in tiie next lap passing'Cooper. Komig, however was still running at the swift pace that he set when the race started am) when the first mile was run he led Callahan by at least fifty yards, in the m*xt four laps Komig increased his lead to at least 250 yards coming within seven seconds of equalling the Inter collegiate record and at the same time lowering the lVnu State record. The summary of the races which p.-un State piled up a total of 101 2-3 points against Colgatcs 30 1-3 points is as follows: 120 yard high hurdles —Won by Bar ron, Penn State: second, Hilu. Penn State: third. KuulTmun Penn State. Time 15.2 seconds. 100 yard dash—Won by Patterson, Colgate; second, Grimes, Penn State; third, Hlle, Penn State. Time 10 sec. One mile run —Won by Hunt, Colgate second Carter, Penn State; third, Strick ler, Penn State. Time 4 minutes, 37 3-5 seconds. 220 yard dash —Won by Patterson, Colgate; second, Grimes, Penn State; third. Taylor, Penn State. Time 22 sec. Quarter ndle run—Won by Taylor, Penn State; second, Demining. Penn State; third. Newcomer, Penn State. Time 50 3-5 seconds. Half mile run—Won by Newcomer. Penn State; second Demmlng, Penn State; third Van Brcc, Colgate. Time 2 minutes 1 second. Two mile run—Won by Homig, Penn State; second, Callahan, Colgate; third Snyder, Penn State. Time 9 minutes, 29 seconds. 220 yard low hurdles —Won by Hlle, Penn Stato; second. Barron. Penn Slate; third, Bulger, Colgate. Time 25 seconds. Pole vault—Won by Tice, Penn State; second. Watson, Colgate; third Nelson, Colgate. Height 11 feet, 6 inches. High Jump—'Won by Parent, Penn Slate; second, tie between Watson, Col gate. Way Penn Slate and Green, Penn State Height 5 feet C 1-4 inches. Broad Jump—. Won by Way. Penn State; second Grub, Penn State; third Watson, Colgate. Distance, 22 feet C I*2 inches. Shot Put—Won by Beck. Penn State: second U'elty, Perm State; third. Mc- Mahon. Penn State. Distance, 29 feet 1 Inch. Hammer throw—Won by Vandllng, Penn Stale; second. Welly. Penn State: third Hess, Penn State. Distance, 110 feet 0 inches. .laveliu throw—Won by Kuos Penn State: second. Volgenau, Colgate; third Patterson, Colgate. Distance, 157 feet. Discuss throw—Won by Beck Penn Stale; second, McMahon, Penn State; third, Daintily, Penn State. Distance 127.7. feet. Varsity PoMpHe* at Pittsburgh Saturday Coming as a surprise to most of the students, the announcement that the Xiltany trackmen have entered the SPORTING GOODS Golf Supplies Track Baseball Tennis ®jje iWustc Eoom “Winged Vamp” FOR MEN It’s new! It’s exclusive. It’s the smartest pat tern in men’s shoe styles offered in two years. Made of fine rich tan calf with plump leather sole and rubber heel. Latest favorite for young men and men who want to stay young. Priced at $ll.OO 20th Century Shoe Co. D. J. LEHMAN, Mgr. Pittsburgh Fifteenth Annual Intercol legiate Track and Field Meet, is being hailed with delight among the student bodv The meet is being held under the * ausplcc-s of the University of Pittsburgh and will be staged in the Sehcnley Ova) this coming Saturday. Seven colleges and universities have entered teams in the meet. These are Pitt Carnegie Tech. .Washington and .Jefferson, Grove City College. Geneva. West Virginia and Penn State. Clearfield High Winn Relay Hellefonte Academy hit the half cen tury mark in points in Hie Interschol ustie Track and Field meet which was held on New Beaver Field last Satur day. and consequently won the Inter scholastic Track Championship of the state. The fight Cor second place in the meet was more exciting than the fight for first place for Bellefontc Ac ademy had no rivals who at any time dangerously threatened her score, while on the other hand, the winner of second place was undecided until the end of the last race when Harrisburg ! Technical High School’s score was ■ found to total up to 28 1-2 points, with Johnstown High coming in third with 25 points. Hellefonte Academy had n monopoly on the field events and tl was due to her victory in this part ..f the program that she won the meet, for she dit not place In a single track event. The one mile relay race and the two mile nm were the most interesting ev ents on the InterscholasHo schedule. Clearfield High won the relay, Johns town came in second and Williamsport came in third. In the two mile race. Vincent, of Johnstown, nosed out Shut*, of Harrisburg Tech. In a very exciting race. This year the number of lads who participated in the events was great er than at any previous time. Over two hundred and twenty men from the various high and preparatory schools throughout the state were on hand ti compote hi the games. The standing ui the schools was as follows: Keilefimtc Academy—so points. Harrisburg Tech.—2S 1-2 points. Johnstown High—2s points. Clearfield High—2o points. Steehon High—l 2 points. Northeast High, Phlla.—lo points. FROSH NINE WINS GAME BY NINTH INNING RALLY (Continued from first page) a free pass to first, advancing to third on Kood’s hit and racing home on a sacrifice fly- by Kusscll to left field. Anders bunted safely, went to second on Hynes' single while Reed crossed the plate, and then came home ahead of Hynes when Loeffler crashed a safe wallop to right field that escaped the ncilefoute garden man. The Fresh men then being ahead, the contest was called with only two out. The line-ups were as follows: Penn State Frosh AB R H. O A E 3 0 0 2 1 3 liHeman as. Koed 2b 5 2 2 1 3 0 Bussell cf. > 2 2 2 0 1 Anders rf 5 2 10 0 0 Palm 1f..... i 1 2 1 0 1 Hynes c > 1 2 13 I 1 J xieffler lb 5 0 1 6 2 1 Seitz 3b 1 0 0 2 1 0 Flxier p 10 10 5 0 Dumbly p 1 0 0 0 0 0 iKui'tietle 1 0 0 0 0 0 •.Mahoney 0 1 0 0 0 0 41 9 10 27 13 7 tßatted fur Fixter in eighth •Batted fur Hilcman In ninth. Hrllefonle AB R H o A 13 Kigby 3b si 0 2 10 1 Irwin 2b 5 112 2 3 I'Wcmuu «s 5 113 2 1 Hillard lb 4 2 2 9 0 0 Stefan p 5 2 3 0 3 0 Webb If 5 0 2 4 0 0 Mcßride e 3 10 5 12 Fraumhelm rf 5 1 2 0 0 1 Fleming cf :..5 0 0 2 0 0 41 8 13 20. 8 8 Three base-hit—Stefan. Irwin. Two l..tse hit—Rigby. Stcfsiu. Reed. Buse on balls-off Fixter 3, off Dumbly 3, off Stettin* I. Struck out, by Fixter 7. by LOST—Between Fye’s store and B. C. U. K. station, a small black purse containing two dollars and a flat key. Please return to D. A, Campbell, phone 4fi-\V. >ENH STATE COLLEGIAN Dambly 1, by Stefan 5. Double play— Flxiev to Loefflor tc Hynes. .Wild pitch—Flxtcr. Hit >y pitcher—.Mc- Bride. Pawaed ball—.Mcßride, Hynes. Stolen base—lrwin 2 llitluril, Webb, McUridu 2, FYnlienl eim. Umpire— Wolfe. NIITANY DIAMOND MEN WIN EASTERN CONTESTS (Continued from first putsch The line-ups were: Penn Stale AB| R II o A 13 * i i o :i i . i 2 2 12 1 'I 0 rt IL U 0 *[ll2oo 11 2 4 0 0 ....l 1 2 0 0 0 •) 0 2 f) 1 0 [OO 7 2 2 ...i 0 10 4 0 6 00000 Menrkle 2b... KlllluKor :iii. Ullery lb Haines ct. Clghtner If. Koehler rf Korb ss. Brumbaugh c. MclUnger i> Thomas p I ti 11 HI) 12 4 tun B R H O A 13 .[.lllOO .512210 1 1 ] I 0 (I . I U 0 11 1 0 . \ u 2 :i n o r. o i> t o o 412 2 0 0 :t 0 0 4) 2 1 ! 1 1 0 1 1 1 II II 0 0 0 Bottlng cf..... MuePhoe 2li. flornmn If Cooke 11). Borg ss Fisher c McXmava If. Keyes 3b Joffrfea p •Ollroy !jS f. 9 20 11 2 Three-base hit—Kllllnger. Two-base lilts—Jeffries. Koehler. Carried runs— Prlneelun. 2; Penn Stale fi. Hit by pitched hall—by Tlomas—Berg. Wiki pilch —Jeffries. Pissed ball—Brum haugh, 2: Fisher. SlriieU out—By Jef- fries 1: by MeUlngev 1; by Thomas. 3. Bases on halls—off leffrios 2: off Mol- linger 4; off Tlmma * 1. Stolen bases tiorimin. Sacrifice hits —Bolting, Mo- Xamara. Keyes, Kt rh. Double Play - Mearkle to Korb to Cilery, l.efl on bases—Penn Stale (»': Princeton 9. Time 2 hours. 1.-ui|*ires—pMeßrlilo ami Mar tint. |. New York Pnlvprslly Fulls On the following day, the Blue uiul White - batsmen traveled to New York City nml, in nnoth|*r very close game, defeated New Yoik University by 4 to 3, a timely hit I>y Koehler bringing in Rintz In the jdghth Inning with the winning tally.) Penn State drew the first in the second frame by scoring two runs oflor Rintz had drawn a walk and Korb had doubled. Koehler had singled previously but was caught between second ami third. Brumbaugh drove in Korb. In I the next Inning, the Nittnny men ancxed their third run by means of two safe wallops. Mearkle scoring, while the] New York players went scoreless for four frames. At the opening of their hjilf of the fifth, they got busy, connecte|l with two of Hunt er's offerings for singles and won two liases on balls a I pair of runs going across the plate before they could be effectually stopped. Miller was sent in for Hunter by boach Bczdek in the , sixth nnd, although the metropolis team secured anojher tally then, they; lacked an efficient punch for the re- : mainder of the contest and did not score again. This final and winning run for Penn State came in tin* eighth, with two men down. Both Cillery and Haines wore thrown out and then Rintz knocked a single, scoring a minute later on a] safe blow by Knob- K»r nnd an error. Hunter pitched well for four innings but began to wobble slightly in the fifth and “Bdz" deemed it best to use Miller for the other four frames. I-lirahfleld, hurling for New York, twirled the entire game. Llglit ner was injured in the game with Princeton and could not appear against the city men, his place being taken by Itlnt'/.. who played a bang-up game. Yule Trinnued by 9 to li The Nittnny diamond men continued i (heir good work on Friday, despite the] fact that it was the thirteenth of the i mouth, and upset the Yale Bulldog by 1 a 9 to a count. The .New Haven team ; was compelled to use three moumlsmen : because of the fierce slugging of the Penn Slate batsmen and could not touch Thomas sufficiently after the first inning to equal the Nlttany score. Chittenden,‘Bobinson and Selleek, who pitched for Yule gave fifteen safe biugl es the majority of these coming in the last frame when Penn State annexed six runs. “Bez’s" tossers secured two runs In the very first inning but the Bulldog got a tally too and although it was ouihit In the next seven innings, managed to hold its own until the fatal , ninth, llobiiihim, hurling for the New •iSnglaml outfit after the second inning, used a slow hall that haffled the Nit tauy men for several innings, hut he was hammered out hi the ninth and ScileeU, who took his pluec Was .also hit hard. Thomas, who went the entire dislutuv for I'eiiu Slate, yielded three hits in tile first inning hut steadied down afterward and took tilings rather easy. He fanned nine men, gave the Yale haliers nine safe clouts, mid walk* ed four. He also made three of the lilts HtsMirod by the Nlttany aggrega tion. Captain Haines proved to he the most consistent hitter of tile IVlin State nine as lie knocked out three singles and a double while Hilary was tin? heaviest hitter of the day, polling out u two-bagger and a triple. Thu score follows. Penn Statu AB It II O A K Mparkin 2b 4 1 1 2 51 1 KHllnwr 3b u 2 2 0 0 0 Cilery 11* 4 2 2 i:i a (»• Unities of. 5 1 4 0 0 0 Hint'/ If 1 l 0 1 0 0: Knehior rf 4 l 2 I 0 lvtirb as 5 0 1 1 f. I) 1 r.rnmbuiiKh e i» 0 0 9 1 1 Thomas P 4 1 3 0 3 0 43 9 15 27 12 2 Yule AB R H O A* E Murphy 2b . 2 0 t 2 0 0 AUli'loh ss 3 1 2 3 2 1 Sloan cf 4 0 0 4 0 0 Kernan lb 3 0 0 S 1 0 Eddy rf. 4 0 0 0 0 o'■ Crane If 4 1 1 1 2 01 L. G. BALFOUR CO. FRATERNITY JEWELERS | Badges Novelties Stationery Placques 1 Memorial Tablets | CLASS RINGS AND PINS | Factory Branch Office | ATTLEBORO. Mass. UNION ARCADE. Pittsburgh, Pa. The Turkish Cigarette **■'‘-"l*4^ We go 6000 miles for the Turkish tobacco used in Murad—Why? Because —Turkish has a taste —Turkish has a.mildness —Turkish has a delight—far beyond all cigarette tobaccos of all other lands — Murad gives you real enjoyment, and true delight such as no Tobacco other than 100% Pure Turkish Tobacco can give. Facts —Facts —FACTS—! J. Hickey 3b... 1 Vtors c Chittenden p Robinson p S.dlcck |i ‘Hickey 33 3 9 37 tf> l * I billed f*>r Sidlock in nlnlh. Tluve-base hit—l‘llery. Two-base hi.s— I'liory. Haines. KUlibiter. Sac rifice hits -.Murphy. Sloan, AUlrieh. Reft «m buses—l'enn Stale to; Vale 9. Struck out—t»y Thomas 9: by Chitten den 3; by Robinson :t. l’.-isi-s on balls of Tin*mas »: off rhhi.-nden 1; off Robinson ul( SellicU l. Hits —off RnUtciidcu, r. in 3 intiitms; off Rnbiu .•'(■ll 7 ill ll 1-3 ii.itinws; off j-VIK-ck 3 ill 3-3 innim,'. U'ihl pitches--Thomas, Hob inson, Settee k Chittenden. Passed ball IVters. I'mpliv—Johnstone, Time— l.rliiuli Is Fmirlh Victim 'riie fourth ami final mutest of the eastern trip 0.-.-urrcd at l.Mhleltcm with hellish ami resultetl in the six toenth straight victory for the itlne ami White nine, Rebiith fulling by the smrt* of f* b» 4. As indicated by the score, the name was hard fought from the start ami taxed the Xiiiuny repre sentatives to (heir limit. Rout; hitsand brilliain fielding on the part of both teams added much interest to the fray, three circuit clouts being secured while a wonderful play by Role the llrown WHY NOT BE A CITY MANAGER? The National Institute of Pub lic Administration offers prac tical professional training for prospective city managers, public administrators, research experts, teachers of government and civic workers. Formerly the Training School for Public Service of the New York Bureau of Municipal Research. Registration limited. 1921 Announcement on NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION 261 Broadway New York City Tens of thousands of smokers tens of thousands of times —have PROVEN this "Judge for Yourself —! ” Tuesday, May 17, 1921 nncl While shortstop. stopped a >’<■>"' S ' ; 'K- 1« the tlrsi frame. The niuvs went scoreless (or (our tight inn and then KiUtnger contt touted the first tally for the .\itzany men' by crashing out a home run. Doublet by Donovan ana Yap in the sixth tied the score however and It for the lucky seventh to set the triumph of the Blue and White. Three singles pushed one vim across the pl&te and then a homer by nierv, with two men on base, scored throe more run*. : With the count resting 5 to 1 them, the l.ehigli haseballers annexed , two tallies in their half of the seventh ..ira home nni by i:..gers with a run n. r nil base and '.hen s.cured another run in the eighth inning, but they could not produce a tying tally in the ninth ami the Xittany men won by & to 4. •10 3 2 2 0 A U 1 6 2 0) .1) 0 t> l V 0 \ 2 1 1 0 0 0! .0 0 0 0 0 0 ; .1 0 0 0 0 0; The KINGS of JAZZ Greatest Comedians VAUDEVILLE STARS are EXCLUSIVE COLUMBIA ARTISTS all the joys of stagelani are yours if you have their RECORDS May Mid-Month Releases “SIREN" DRY DREAMS Hickman's Orch. TODDLE BEELA BOOLA Paul Biesc Trio The GIFT and ART SHOjP | 131