Penn State collegian. (State College, Pa.) 1911-1940, June 04, 1926, Image 1

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    Sing A Song
Ten Bucks
VOL XXI, No. 66
SEVENTH IN TITLE
RACES, TRACKMEN
FACE PITTSBURGH
Strong Niltany Team Expected
To Overwhelm Panthers
In Meet Tomorrow
MOORE SCORES IN BOTH
HURDLES AT CAMBRIDGE
Penn State Places Seven Men In
Intcrcollegialcs—Accident
Slops Bartholomew
Launching a dcspeiule attach a*
gainst the avalanche of spew! that de
scended from the Pacific coast, match
ing their stride with a host of runa
away pacemakeis who smashed si>
old records, and 1 allying in the face
of an accident that picvenlcd Dick
Bartholomew from competing in the
century and 220, Penn State placed
seven men in the I C 4A jubilee
meet Saturday at Cambridge, scored
fifteen points ami finished in seventh
plucc.
Tomorrow the Nittuny loues travel
to Pittsburgh’s new stadium where
they will clash with Pitt’s cindei
squad in the closing event of Penn
State’s sixth consecutive undefeated
season * Barring a severe letdown, the
Blue and White rumicis should over
whelm the Pantheis foi the seventh
straight year Pitt’s best chance lies
in the field where Gibby Welch and
Captain Linn should excel.
Intcrcollogintes
It was n ton id spectacular exhibi
tion of speed and brawn that Unified
20,000 spectators at Cambridge Only
one element unexpectedness—was
lacking to make it the most successful
intercollegiate track meet in the fifty
3 cam of its histuiy.
The University of Southern Cali
fornia, defending champions, swept
down upon the East and litorall* iaid
ed eight of the fifteen events for a
total of 35 1-2 points. Stanford was
-second with 25 3-2 points. Yale third
with 25 1-3 and Harvard fourth with
20 Syracuse with 37, California with
3G and Penn State with 15, were next
After mowing down las opponents
in the prcliminaiy heats of the 120-
yard high hurdles on Friday and also
qualifying m 1he220-.vaid!ow huidles,
Crip Mooic, hardly showing the of
(Contmucd on Inst page)
GOLFERS ENGAGE CENTRE
HILLS HERE TOMORROW
Invaders Humbled By Varsity In
Previous Match—Gioom For
Intcrcollegialcs
Engei to avenge then lone defeat
or the season and to mcicasc then
stung of wins to five the Penn Stale
golfers meet the Centig Hill-, counliy
club linksmen here toinonow at one
thiily o’clock. The Lions have al
lencly humbled the mvndets m a pio
vtous aetto More than fouiteen
men will compose each team
Although a definite list of players
could not be announced because of,
doubtful eligiblity it is most likely
that Captain Tajloi will lend the ag
gregation with Canon, Hewitt and
Gieer m the fust two fnuisomcs.
During the past two weeks the en
tire squad has been practicing at in
tervals under the tutelage of Coacli
Ituthcrford and are anxious to get
back to the winning sli ulc they held
before they weic humbled by Svin
cuse two weeks ago. The Nittanv
mentor is dulling his proteges with
a view to piescnting a foimulable
line-up in the Intcieollegiatcs next
month.
Nittany Jazz Artists
Set Sail For Europe
“We’re going over'” seems to be
the populni hue, cry ami song of a
septet of local meiry ju/.z artists who
arc making hnstv preparations foi
embarkation on the Cunatd liner, Bor
engena, next Wednesday.
Seven expectunt students, having
struggled through early examinations,
remain without a wonv, eager to pro
duce unrestrained thoids foi the ie
spunsive dancing feet of a multitude
of sen-going vacationers.
When the massive floating hotel
points her nose toward the Continent
the Blue and White Orchestra, ex
periencing its first trip neioss the
surging pond, will biondcnst a har
monious note to foreign poits, that
Penn State—spirit, colois and all, is
dispatching a lepicscntntive musical
regiment to join the winks of Euiope’s
latest Invader—General Jiu<s.
®oml*W/©ekly
Kgmt&fafe A
Carelessly-clicked Handcuffs Force
■ Unbilled Bellefonte Trip On Actor
Our hcio sidled down Allen street,
his hands clamped togcthci behind his
back by seiviceublc nickel-steel hand
cuffs His eyes were glued m the as
phalt as he strove to escape iccog
mtion. Propelled by the brawny arm
of Chicf-of-police Yougel, the youth
stepped into the side car of the sput
tering service motorcycle and awk
waidly sat down.
Co-op loafers and passing students
paused to gave at the broad backs of
the Chief and his hnnd-cuffed victim
as they tiundlcd off m the gencial di
lution of Bellefonte amidst a drench
ing shower of lain Faster and still
faster the twin Indian raced until it
PLAYERS ARRANGE
FOR TICKET SALES
Seal Orders May Be Placed
By Mail—One Dollar
Is Top Price
"THE BOOMERANG” TO BE
STAGED FRIDAY EVENING
Tickets for the Penn State Playeis
pioduction, “The Boomerang,” to be
given at the Auditorium next Fnduy
evening, may be secured by sending
mail orders to Box 55. Seats aie
priced at seventy-five cents and one
dollar. Next Wednesday and Thurs
day the general ticket sale will be held
at White* Musscr’s Fraternities and
gioups wishing to buy blocks of
seats may do so by mail order
An office fitted with all modern
equipment, but no patients, is the sett
ing in which the doctor finds himself
in the opening scene of “The Boomer
ang ” The patient he finally gets
turns out to be a love-sick individual
who has gone to pieces because of
jealously lie decides to take the ease
to prove to his office assistant, a
nurse, that a modern doetoi can treat
anything Although the/loetor is suc
cessful ns fai as his patient is con
cerned, the effect upon himself is not
quite what he expected It takes the
nuise to bring the play to a sntisfact
oiy conclusion
One of the noteworthy featuies of
the cast is the fact that there is only
one senior in a role “The Boomoi
ang’ was cast this way because the
Pin vers wish to keep this play as well
as “The Fust Year,” which has no
(Continued on second page)
FLORAL SOCIETY MADE
GAMMA CHAPTER OF PI
ALPHA XI FRATERNITY
Gamma chapter of Pi Alpha Xi,
honorary floiicultuic fraternity, was
installed at Penn State Saturday ev
ening when a delegation fiom Alpha
chaiptei, Cornell, foimally initiated
twelve chaitei membets Piof A
11. Nelnhng of Cornell, national pies
ident, welcomed the new membets
and presented the chartei to Pi of E
I Wilde of the fioricultuie depart
ment, who was instrumental in get
ting a chuplei at Penn State
Aftei tlie initiation ceiemomes a
Lanquct was held at the Umveisilv
club, with Pi of Wilde m the lolc*
of toastmnslei. At a Imef meeting
F P. Walton ’27 was elected presi
dent and A L Simons ’27 secretaiy
of the oignni/ntion.
Y. M. C. A. DELEGATES
CONFER AT EAGLESMERE
Ten-Day Program Arranged For
Visitors—Twenty Men In
Penn State Group
For the second time in America, a
joint Student Conference for men and
women will open when the delegates
fiom colleges in the Middle Atluntic
distuct ninve at Englesmeie on the
Lake of Eagles, icputed to be the
most beautiful spot in Pennsylvania,
on June eleventh for a ten days’ pro-.
gium. The puiposc of the convention ;
is to affoid an uppoitumtv for a care
ful studv of inoial and ichgious prob
lems to the college students of this
section.
Such well-known spenkeis as Prof.
Biucu Currv, Hon J. S Wilson, How
aid Thurman, and Dr. Edith Swift will
be present Ideal provisions foi all
summer sports will be made foi the
visiting delegates. The meeting is
sponsored by the Y M C. A.
The Penn State group will leave
State College on Friday morning, June
eleventh, by bus foi the ride to the
mountain lukc.
STATE COLLEGE, PA., FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 1926
disappeared .uiuimJ a cune ou thy
slippery macadam.
In Old Chapel all was silent .is the
audience waited for the second of the
senes of one-act plays which were
being piescntcd. Twenty minutes pas
sed, yet no second dintna was an
nounced. A rumor that the student
dircctoi of the play was missing was
bandied around the hnll “he
left his fraternity about an hour ago,
but not .1 soul has seen him since ”
Suddenly a student, gasping for
breath, rushed into the loom and col
lapsed in a sodden heap on a neaiby
chair Little nvulcts of ram cas
caded off his dnpping clothes and
gathered in pools beneath. Anxious
friends surrounded him and demand
ed an explanation Now breathing
normally our hero told him how he,
as director of the second play, had
gone to Chief Yougcl to borrow a
pan of handcuffs foi one of the mem
bcis of the cast. To show the novice
how the instrument of the law work
ed the Chief snapped the links over
the wnsts of the ducctor, but after
making a huiricd search through hi’
pockets he shouted, “The keys are m
Bellefonte.”
NITTANY STICKMEN
DROP FINALE, 12-7
Outplayed By Union Combine,
Lions Display Spurts Of
Fast Field-work
I*ENN STATE PENALIZED
HEAVILY—HACKETT STABS
The loss of its last game to the
stiong Union college combination on
New Beaver field Saturday ufternoon,
by a 12-7 count, makes four victories
and three defeats the final rccoid of
the Penn State laciossc team
The play of the Nittany stickmen
was again too inconsistent to_check
their opponents’ offense and to amass
enough goals to claim u victory. At
times during the contest the Lions
displayed spurts of fast, clever passing
and footwork that netted counters in
quick ordet. The outstanding defect
in then stvie was failure to carry the
ball through the enemy defense with
out stopping play in mid-field to wait
for openings
Near the end of the first half Penn
State made a strong counter attack
that cut the visitors’ load to one goal.
Dmmg the lust period the Union
stickmen netted two goals while two
Nittany players were out of the game
on account of penalties. Although
this fact handicapped the Blue and
White aggregation the visitors surpas
sed them in aggicssiveness throughout
the contest, three men scoring three
goals each Captain Ilackott of the
Lions was high scorer, with four goals
ucdited to him
Lions Tally
Penn State scored the lust tally af
ter the opposing nttacks hud carue I
the hall to the Blue and White gotil
only to have then play broken up.
The counter was the result of a well
timed play, Wondel to llackett. Ful
lowing the initial scoring Union kept
the ball in Penn State tern lory most
of the time, seoung from short, snap
py pnsses in front of the goal Mc-
Donald took one of these passes to
net it for his team’s first tally.
The Lions then took the ball down
(Continued on last page)
STUDENT METALLURGISTS
TO HOLD SMOKER TONIGHT
Tin* students’ blanch of the Mining
and Metallmgicnl Engineers will have
its final meeting and smoker of the
year tonight at eight o’clock, in room
111), Old Mining building A C
Ficldner, supci inlondent of the U
S. Bureau of Mines, Pittsburgh, will
he present and address the meeting
on the subject “Liquid Fuels from
Coal.”
THREE TEAMS SURVIVE
GREEK GOLF TOURNEY
In the final golf match, which is
scheduled for the first pail of next
week, Delta Tau Delta will play the
winner of the Omega Epsilon-Alphu
Chi Sigma match.
Alpha Chi Sigma beat Alpha Sig
ma Phi, leaving tlnee teams in the
tournament The weather interefer
od with the schedule the eaily part
of the week.
Srgmn Pi Signiu Elections
President—H. B. DeVorc ’2G
Vice Pres.—ll. H. Rciehard ’27
Societaly—J. S Carey
Tieasurer —E. R. Bordner
Dormitories Crowded
For Summer Session
Announcement has been made at Ihc
office of the Jean of the Summer Ses
sion that all women’s dormitories as
well as many of the fraternity hou'**s
open for the supimei, have receiveu
their quota of roomers. Several mote
fraternities arc expected to anuounc-'*
the admission of a record number cf
summer students to then houses in
order to offset the numbei of applica
tions which more than take up all of
the rooms available
Particularly in the derailment of
Musil has the increase in emollmei.l
been remarkably noticeable Music
instructors, who formeily attcndeJ
summer session of colleges in othei
states and now able to obtain credits
for a degree, are applying for admis
sion
EDITORS OF STATE
TO CONVENE HERE
Will Discuss Current Publication
Problems In Two-Day
June Program
NEWSPAPERMEN WILL
STAGE GOLF TOURNEY
A summer outing and meeting for
newspaper editors anti publishers of
the state, to be held at Penn State
June twenty-eighth and twenty-ninth,
was announced yesteiday by J. L
Stewart, of Washington, president of
the Pennsylvania' Newspaper Publish
er’s association. [
While at Stated College the editots
and publishers will be housed in one
of the College dormiloucs and will
have their headquarters at the Centie
Hills country club Mornings of the
two-day convention will be devoted to
business meetings of daily and week
ly men. Afternoons will be taken up
with the playing of the annual Penn
sylvania newspapermen's .champion
ship golf tuinlianfeiit, and a trip ovet
the campus.
The invitation of the College ad
ministration to hold the summer out
ing at State College was accepted at
a recent meeting of the executive
committee of the publishers’ associ
ation. A special piogram committee
lias already* taken steps to make this
annual outing the best ever exper
ienced. The College will provide re
creational features and entertain
ment for the newspapermen and their
HIVCS,
ALLEGE NEWSPAPERMEN
SCORE CHAPEL SPEAKERS
I. N. A. Raps o>cr-emphasis
Of Football—Convenes
At Dartmouth
Dedai mg its opposition to conipul
soiy chapel and over-emphasis of
football, nineteen members of the
Eastern Intercollegiate Newspaper
association concluded then annual
meeting at Daitmouth college Satut
day*. W. P Reed ’27 and S R Robb
'27 weie the Penn State delegates to
the convention
In addition lo this the journalists
voted to suppoit the Student Federa
tion llnough the news and editorial
columns. To enable a bcttei ex
change of news among members, an
mlei national news seivicc will be es
tablished with a mcmbei ftom each
paper to serve as editor of all Fedei
ation infounation
Deciding to hold the next conven
tion ut Amherst next yenr ihc colleg
iate pressmen also elected C W Cole
’27 of that college as the next piesi
ilcnt of the association
JUNIORS PLACE FIRST
IN CO-ED TRACK MEET
At the co-ed truck meet held on
Holmes field Friday, the juniors plac
ed first m eight events and ginned a
total of fifty-live points. Next in
order were the sophomoies, who rank
ed first in two events and mude twen
ty-two points The freshmen wen*
thud, taking one event and seor ng
sixteen points The semois hud to be
content with fouith place
Miss N E Shoiulan ’27, the individ
ual star of the meet, captured the
highest number of points by winning
fust place in tho baskctbull throw, Ihc
baseball throw and the running broad
jump. Miss E. A. Bullock ’27, ranked
second by placing first m the hurdles
and high jump and-second in the base
ball throw.
CARIJ3JI3 LIBRARY
fjf 4 4 COPIES +
Qknmjtatt
PROFESSORKOCHER
ACCEPTS POSITION
AT U. OF VIRGINIA
To Resign Head Of Penn State
Architectural Unit After
Auspicious Service
COUItSES DEVELOP HERE
UNDER HIS LEADERSHIP
Holds Offices On Two National
Committees—To Get Ph. D.
From New York U.
Aiccyling the position as lumd of
the Melntire School of Architecture
and Fine Arts at the University of
Virginia, Prof A L Kochcr, head of
the department of Architecture here,
will submit his resignation to the
Trustees tins month after fourteen
jears of teaching at Penn State
Since Piofossor Kochcr assumed his
duties in 11)12 the department has in
creased fiom twelve to 120 student-.
Spending late houis with his proteges
almost cvciv night he has become nop
ulnr with his understudies and has
widened the appreciation of sculptuie,
painting and nrclutectuie
At Leland Stanford univcisity Pro
fessor Kocher received his Bachelor of
Aits degree in 1909 The next two
>eais lie spent doing graduate work at
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(Continued on second page)
YEARLINGS BOW TO
SHIPPENSBURGNINE
Iladley, Center Fielder, Placed
On Mound When Pitching
Staff Gives Out
PLEDES GARNER TRIO OF
WINS FROM NINE STARTS
Plopping a pair of games to the
Shippensburg Noimal school tossers,
the fiesliman nine closed then slip
shod season Monday The final count
of the Memonal Day tilt was 4-2
w'lule last Saturday’s fray finished at
iy-7 in favor of the normal school
Coach Leo Ilouck sprang a sur
pi iso Monday when he put J Ilad
lej, ordinanlv a center fielder, on the
mound Hadlev pitched a game
which belied his habitual post and
allowed the Shippensburg batters only
a ha!f-do?en hits.
Among the multitude of safeties
which the visitors garnered fiom the
delivery of Cnnan in Saturday’s
game weie fmn cncuit clouts which
aided materially in the Shippensburg
victory Several costly eirors also
huit the fieshmen, but the one big
difficulty was the lack of a pitchei to
iclicve Canan Shippensburg took a
lead in the first inning and increased
it steadily thioughout the game.
Out of nine stalls, the fieshmen
have taken only tluco wins this sea
son, winning fiom Slippeiv Rock and
(Continued on second page)
GRADUATION EXERCISES
DISCUSSED BY SENIORS
Eggleston Elected Permanent
Class Scribe—Memorial
Report Accepted
The class of 192 G elected E R Lg
gleslon as permanent sccietarv at
their meeting Tuesday night and then
ptocceded to discuss details foi the
commencement c\oicises.
R T Kricbcl, chairman of the cap
and gown committee, reported that
caps and gowns may be seemed on
Fnday afternoon or Saturday moi mng
before commencement. The ate to be
worn on Sunday dunng the Bacca
laureate sermon, on Monday for the
Class Day exercises and on Tuesday
ut the graduation exercises mil arc
then to bo returned immediately tu the
cap and gown committee.
The repoil of the memorial commit
tee was accepted, which suggested
that a fountain he elected on the cum
pus, in fiont of Old Main oi if tin*
did not hurmoni/c with the surround
ing architecluie then the Burrow es
street enlinnco to the College is to be
finished ns a fitting memonal to the
class.
THETA ALPHA PHI ELECTIONS
Pioxulont—F. 11. Kratz ’27
Vico Pics —Doiotliy Musser ’27
Secretary—Helen S Doty ’27
Tieasuiei—H M. Roaenbluth ’27
Lions Encounter Bisons
On Diamond Tomorrow
Bucknell Boasts Five-Year Winning
Streak Over Penn State—Rule
As Slight Favorite
j i.— v
| Dean Requests Names j
f Of Parly Chaperons j
I All fiateimtics arc request- j
i ed to register the names of j
I chaperones for Commencement j
! house party m the Office of f
| the Dean of Women before June j
! fifth. The town and street ad- i
di esses of each should also be !
included. I
WILL AWARD PRIZE
FOR COLLEGE SONG
Collegian Sponsors Contest To
Find Suitable Music For
Prof. Long’s Poem
COMMITTEE TO CHOOSE
SCORE BY AUGUST FIRST
Feeling that a new song would
stimulate flagging interest in Fenn
State music, the COLLEGIAN will
give a prize of ton dollars to the
student oi faculty member who shall
compose music suitable to the poem
“State, To Thee,’’ written by Prof.:
Mason Long of the English depart
ment and published on the second
page of the cuncnt issue of The Old
Mum Hell.
The winning score will be selected
bv a committee of which Director Kr
W Grant of the music department
will he the chairman. Director Grant
will select three others to serve on
the committee
AH music must be .submitted to Di
icctoi Grant before the first of Aug
ust, when the contest will officially
close Competition is open Ito all
member-i of the classes of 1926, 1927,
1928 and 192!) and all active mem
bers of Uic faculty, exclusive of mem
bers of the committee and members
of the COLLEGIAN staff.
The name of the winner will be
announced and a reproduction of the
pure score printed in the second is
sue of the COLLEGIAN after the
summer recess.
Thu sentiment expressed in “State,
To Thee’’ is such that the poem de
seives a place among Penn State
songs. The only specifications in the
contest arc that the composition be
entirely original and that the score!
be one of easy four-part harmony.
Queen Leads Court
In Annual May Day
Tableau Saturday
Bon owing everv color of the min
bow, inviting picturesque charm*ers
to descend from the pages of
history, mutating the most beautiful
of flowers and rivaling the famed
beauty of Pan’s pipes, Penn State co
eds did honor to the month oi Mav on
Holmes field Saturday before an au
dience of more than 2500 people
In addition to the group dances,
thcie weie several solos, including a
toe dance and a gypsy tambourine
dance The most spectacular ot the
group dances was a tableau represent
ing the passing of winter and the ad
vent of spring The Maypoln dance
and an old English ceremonial com
pleted this part of the program.
At the height of the fete the ouocn
and her couiL came on the field, ad
vancing majestically to the music of
the Muy Day orchcstru After her
coionation, the queen, who >s Miss C
E. Nisslcy ’26, viewed the few remain
ing dunces from her throne Misa B
J. Krause ’27 was in churge.
INTERFRATERNITY NINES
ENTER TOURNEY FINALS
Elimination m the Intcrfrateriuty
baseball tourney uic continuing after
the break in the schedule caused by
Memonal Day exercises The hauls
will be played next week.
In the recent games the results aic
as follows Alphu Zela defeated Beta
Theta Pi, Phi Sigma Kappa won from
Phi Delta Theta; Theta Xi eliminated
Alpha Tau Omega, Phi Kappa Psi
took over Pi Kappa Alpha and Alpha
Chi Rho conquered Chi Upsilon.
Not
Easily
Buffaloed
PRICE FIVE CENTS
J The Penn Stale baseball team will
stack up against an old lival on the
diamond here lomoirow when it take-,
the field agumst a dangeious Buck
ncll nine at two-Uurty o’clock It will
be the final home engagement of the
year for the Lions.
Should the Lions spring somewhat
of a surprise and defeat the mvadci.s
it will be the first tunc since 1921 that
a Blue and White baseball team lias
been victorious over Bucknell
Aided by masterful hurling on the
part of Blaisdell and Murphy, the Bis
ons have hung up a creditable iccord
The Blue and Gold team has yet to
bow before the attack of any college
team in Pennsylvania.
The Bisons have been gathering mo
mentum with every game, winning
their last four contests DiLkmson,
Juniata, Gettysburg (twice), Albright
and Ursmus aie numbered among the
Bucknell victims On an eaily season
trip the visitors lost to Gcoigctown,
Catholic univcisity and the Quantico
Mauncs and Intel (hopped games to
ML St Mary’s and the Williamsport
team of the Ncvv-York-Pennsylvani i
league Short? will be behind the
plate and the playeis will line up with
Kostos, first base; Tuck, second base;
Gaskill, thud base; MaeCleaiy, shotl
stop, N Blaisdell, left field, Quinn,
tenter field, and W Blaisdell, light
field
Should Be Close Tilt
It is probable that Lefty Page, who
has not seen action since dropping a
5-1 lieartbreaker to Pennsylvania, vvid
be Coach Bezdek’s choice foi the
mound assignment. The tall south
paw proved a souice of worry to the
Villanovn and Red and Blue batsmen
m the two majoi games that he twirl
ed, and with better support would have
emerged the victor.
Present Indications point to a pitch
ers’ battle tomorrow Murphy, prob
able Bucknell selection, experienced
little difficulty in fooling the 1925
Blue and White sticksmitlis but may
bo surprised in tomoirow’s tilt
With Ken Haines slurring in the
relief role, Penn State took advantage
of the bleaks to score six runs in a
big sixth inning rally that was
enough to defeat a troublesome M.m
etta team by a 6-2 score last Satur
day
Styborski started the game in the
box but was unable to maintain the
fast pace he set and after filling the
bases with only one out in the fourth
gave way to Haines Thu lanky soph
omore then proceeded to fan the next
two battei s, ictiring the side without
scoring damage Haines was the com
plete master of the situation ami was
in danger but once foi the rcm.imdoi
of the game In the seventh, foui
successive singles after one out threat
ened trouble but the Blue and White
hurlcr vvoatheicd the attack It was
the Hurd victoiy that Haines has gai
nered via the relief route.
NITTANY NETMEN TEST
PANTHERS TOMORROW
Brothers Star On Undefeated
I’ilt Combination—Lions
Top F, and M., 7-2
Facing the undisputed collegiate
tennis champions of the Last, Coach
Ham’s netmen will attempt to tilt it
back the Pitt invasion on the Aunory
courts tomoi row afternoon at two
o'clock The Panthers have emerged
victorious from every one of their
twelve matches with the strongest
eastern teams this season
In Dave and Johnny O'Loughhn,
the visitois have a pan of coiiitmen
who compare favorably' with rank
ing collegiate stars Thu brothers
have won every one of their single
matches to date, and have captured
numerous double tilts Bam, play
ing number three, has also been un
defeated on the com Is tins season
Capturing foui singles and three
doubles matches, the netmen gni tim
ed their second win of the season .it
the expense of Franklin and Mm
shall qn the Armorv com Is Satuiday
Captain Malpass pluying second sing
les, McCovvutt on the thud court, and
Eggleston and McCabe on the fifth
and sixth positions won tluee-sct
victories from then Luncastci oppon
ents.
Hellmich, stroking on the first
court, bowed to Lcfovrc after a limit
ing three-set battle, 0-6, 6-9, 4-6. In
the doubles mntchex Hellmich and Mc-
Covvatt, Eggleston and Bari, and
Malpass and Garinan tuincd m vic
tories.