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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (May 13, 1931)
hi Page Six III I' t.'f LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER, LA GRANDE, ORE. Wednesday, May 13, 1931 PLENTY OF HITS AS SERIES OPEN J. i Seattle loom R. H. . 13 7 U Batteries: Page. Preltas. Lemanaky tana imx; cole, waisn ana Brenzei. . . .. R. B. Z. Hen Francisco .'.. 3 11 2 w I Sacramento 16 0 r, ., , ' i Batteries Zlnn and Penebsky; Fre- Portland Swamps Los An- oiuick and win.. ' geles While Hollywood ; Hollywood ...... 'lomfto flnb-lnnW wmmiu - z-cuiotfii ana xtesa. By Tne Aftsociated Frew) -There was plenty of slugging as ft new batch of series startea yesterday )a the Pacific CoaAt league. The feames found the Portland Beavers, I however, strengthening f-hetr hold on i first place. j The ban Francisco Seals beat Sac- ramento 3 to 1;, Seattle overcame the ' Mission Reds 6 to 7 and Hollywood; TKTnr prf rtrm lmWw doused Oakland 7 to 2. All the U Hiln'e, SSX Imbler Defeats Union 30 to 0 To Clinch Title Were played last night. Bowman Portland nitchr. held th I E ' W Aiikcis to nine hcatri-d hit while i - r ' . th n,,,i,. i-V" ",B Becona 01 s aeries the Ducks gathered lo off lour Loj Angeles pitchers. Jimmy Zlnn hurled the Seals to victory over Sacramento. The lone Sacramento tally was credited to an error oy wera, Bcal xhird baseman, IndfuiiM Statu HtflH. Seattle's Indians Jumped into ac tion anu rming on la nits downed -the Missions by getting two runs in (the last two Innings after the Mis sions had tied the score at several all In the seventh, Lawrence, Seattle .right fielder, came through for a triple, a double and two singles. .The Hollywood Stars made the first .bid. for their victory over Oakland In -ine tmra inning when they scored inree runs. the Union-Wallowa league title Imbler defeated Wallowa previously and a win Friday would wind up the season. A loss for Imbler would re quire another game. Union was the guest at Imbler yes terday and fared poorly, due to Jack son's faultless pitching and the ring ing bingles contributed by his team mates. The score was 30 to 0 and the game was called at the end of the fifth Inning. Woodell, of Imbler. nil. a nome run, a triple and a single ana Frlzzell and Wagner each got u uwuuic anu two singles, Imbler Is playing at Elgin today. The score yesterday; R. H. E. unjon, . ... 0 2 0 Imbler 30 17 1 Two more wera added in the eighth and another couple In Jackson and Masters; me mntn. Oakland drew first blood f ner and Stratum ny scoring one run in the first and ; . '-'rife " fir y $ J -v mT a w.uMM yiW W y- ZS' JOE VOMIK ... :..j, ,t ' .' Weaver, Con- second but that ended the Acorns' trips around the basis. r ' Yesterday's results: Portland B. H. E. 10 16 1 2 0 2 Xios Angeles ' -Batteries: Bowman and Woodall; Kelson, Peters, Moncrlef, Gabler and Sehulte. ,1 .1 j HONOR TIGER I ATHLETES AT I HI-DAD MEET (Continued Jrom Page One) The banquet last night formally honors the three athletic teams, the xtudent body president and nmlrinnt- elect, the yell leader and the business j . , a " o,nJlt. CJereland jooltle senwtlon. provides the nleceftt baseball succks story or the yrar. The batting and iieloinr tana ut the 21-year-old left fielder pktSred alK." "arnbhes Athletics Reach Top After Poor " Start In April Ily IlllKll . fullerton Jr. (Associated Press Sports Writer) In Lhf lb.11 hAiuHntl OAon managerarff the various teams. It was the pattern set by two previous years. Hollywood announced today that Hl-Oad honor , the Philadelphia Athletics are dun to Missions . puis, given annually to those students win their third straight American Sacramento Baseball Standings By the Assorlated Press W. Portland 20 Oakland 17 San Francisco . 18 18 17 INe Wekoweyou to Portland. 200 comfortable roomi eacn with bsui. Kcuonsbie rate Convenient dowivtowo location Ahotel CONGPISS PORTLAND, OREGON Lnuu X. boczl. Hakleni Managtr WhO eXCel In their Studies. WOUld bt iv.nn.l Ti Im Anl atvarrlMl nn t.ho Qltt nr u.v !.. . . . .. . . o .... - ', : . - . . J ; me As.siartea oaaiy ana then breez-1 ""'"c TrilV MtrZ(rS, inirooucea E. ped through to tne championship. This 2I -gh P.rlnc'Pa. as the -year they were off to a iad.atart first speaker after the niim V(,n. i W""1'". entertained for sv?h m 1929. Philadelphia reaulred five nii . ., " ?T , or we"-;:weeks to get Into first place hutnerer New V played selections. Mr. Tow er's talkw t. ....- .Z. i" , Boston dfmlt. in. lh hih .- -r m. ."" Mfup- r-n r ?T T'-s-pmT. which iSSoT cZhed bSe thZZl,, leads to ccreater and trreatr nrmm. .. 1 V pm aHainhio o pllshmenu with the nossln., vri i ifV "1". n.. ?m - .. .NATIONAL LKAOUR W. L.' St. Louis , 14 4 New York 14 fi 13 9 IZI..Zl5 Vosmik Poison To Rival Clubs In First Year CLEVELAND UPt Easy swings from powerful shoulders and a keen eye have counted heavily for Joe Vosmik. 31 -year-old left fielder for the Cleve land Indians in bos climb from sand Lots to big league in two years. . As soon as he stepped into the majors his batting was the talk of uie Daseoau worm. yosmifc was kept out of the open ing game with Chicago, but ,was In the lineup the next day. Pat Cara way was in the .box. Vosmik col lected .two singles' In five tries. In the next game he batted against the veteran spit ball pitcher. Urban Faber. Joe slammed Faber for a double and a single before he was sent to the ; showers. In the fourth game with I Chicago, vosmik got live hits out of five times at bat. one thr.ee .bagger. three doubles, and a single. Jfe then faced one .of .the best southpaws in the game. Earl White bill, of Detroit, and got a homer and a single, waite Uoyt, another veter an right hinder, was Jqe's next -vic- um. The first-time Vosmjk came -to bat Hoyt tried to scare him toy pitching one at nis neaa. un tne next pi ten Ahd on the next .trip to the plate he blew himself .to a single. He went five days before he .was stopped by Vic fiorretl and Art Her ring, of -Detroit. Sorrell, Joe says, has been "the toughest pitcher he has faced so far. The following fame, however, he gat three .hits- gut !of iuur limes up. Most of this reason Vosmik has oeen -eaoing iqe (eague natters, in nine games ne airucK out pniy twice. Vosmik .says he has found the curve ball his easiest prey, but it reany masea no great, dfrference. The ball may be .either slow of fast. He waits with the bftt resting easily on pis rignt shoulder .until the ball Is halfway between the plate and the PDTr inn w ,o ,n , pwenera oox. fiaen ne prepares lor rwv t,7. .To.:?"' .ul ' ZZ't?"; i it ami gives .the bat a .three-quarter around the state today the 12-team .,1; . ... Y . . .... field in the state high school basket-' to ball nmmpnt uZuZ i center, and on a line without much ' ; icpitttea oy a id-team Held. 7 ; ZZ r , . T X to discover that Letzelter indeed had entered West Point over the age lim it of 22 and could not, as a result, engage In further ball-toting for the soldiers. ' Letzelter's Ineligibility was discov ered in the midst of the 1930 foot ball season, in time to bar him from playing against Notre Dame or the Naval academy. He bad come to West Point after starring for Car- neg.- . ' ... Cy will continue to perform his miiiLflrv cnores. muic iv w INSIDE DOPE " The search for further data from "w mtwwuako . ib rewarded k notations on the visit nr ok-., " Root to the Is VlSlt Of Pha-lTI town Of Dannm .SF The famous Chimon r.,u ', F hander tola Edwin McKay of tkl Donora Herald -funerican that tiSf new ball, while Just as Uvelv il the old. nevertheless "is a hem the pitcher, because the ralJS seams make it easier to control " Continuing. Boot explained: ' riLCJtiug a curve this year nswji .v wm (tub year. u But be the cheering secUon. he was not guilty nimseii ." when they do hit it. It will trVS mtrAnriMntAtion. but the Cl06St he ..... . 4ar h u-it vl will get to the gridiron next fall will Being In the neighborhood. Broth er ttooi vaiceu a lew words of com mendatlon for Jewel Ens andh. Pittsburgh Pirates. "If Pittsburgh only had a counl. of good pitchers to add .to the staff the club would be the most dah gerous in the league." said the Cuh Pet. .688 .515 .514 .600 .488 16 Teams Will Enter The 1932 State Tourney the 'post on June 1 for all hut two Brooklyn Fans. Hheoherd. Nimland V,.i .J,ul.lwo ZlJ 'SS had'tT Cincinnati . 3 BRAKES didrii hold 4 but the VERDICT WILLY O W WAR NOCK MGR preciatlon of the athletes for the in-. ' A; ... T. Tnn Grande " 1uk'"B "e as are accus- uc' .tj-tmnrl ulna V. I m , Mr. Woodle sooko brlenv. m.ntinn. "J . " i"" Ing In his talk the fine record, that "I" e" '. " B5: "ul hint that next vr th -ri,. T " give tne a s tne lead by ."pTte ofio7graSuaUoB S J JttSTtSS SS IS Snshlp3.0" 11,6 tra" ' Ch,Un- ame.WgrabnirgnatSa.r'oftr Te 'deds."1" " the loyal support accorded the school Swuy and Simmons Tlin fh r1 by the men and women of tiio con.. ..w.".y. nd .81mm? . Put. the, mtuiitv nulling mucn oy nitting nis filth i Outlook I. lirllllii.tf I homer of the year In the ninth. Arnold aratm'V s S2f-.i ' .5." not . the only pitching team coach, who brinks much vanity . yesieroays games, however, material t2 52T M .22. J". cut scores "of b ? "fotbah performance. Vic" r?ell did ti e bot"an.occ etc tta otherwio WOrk t,le Mcond BH1 le0e woTd ' tavrS a'tn telle comptmo Z;vP,!g ', 2 0 He stated that thi. .nrin victory over the Boston Red Sox. Sor- of track prospects have developed in K1,"1!0 trouble several times but the freshmanand phomore ?Se. ?" ' "bi" ,S,,',,i.h "Wn? ?.Ut' T"e that speak well for t'ho next year or SWjiof Zli ifarold Boone, secretary of the ' ?!,'S..U"f"!,0- t!',!y ?Ut .t?Betl"2; chamber of commer m-,1 .. ih. .l ,reo r tlleln " ho fourth with groat amount of state and Northwest "0rUl" Ut,ubl0 bringing in both ?f,1,'raKr.lSi".l Uranut Wins AKI. suited from thn l..,rii.i rmrrt. r M. Brandt of the Boston Braves the Tlonr ly.ni... h; : won nm nun straight victi Eastern Oregon In tim m. n.ri ino. i-lnclnnati Bel 4 to 2 In nf tl.n l..in .I...... ..!...? til: A.MKIUCAN U.llil.e W. L. Philadelphia 11 1 New York .12 8 Cleveland 12 10 Washington 12 11 Detroit 13 12 Chicago Boston Bt. Louis VKKTRKDAV'H KKSULT8 Pacific Coast Portland 10. Los Angeles 2. Seattle 9. Missions 7. Ban Francisco 3, Sacramento Hollywood 7, Oakland 2. .486 .429 Pet. .778 .700 .691 .679 .478 .429 I .348 .150 Pet. .611 .6O0 .620 .429 .429 .333 National At Boston 4-2, Cincinnati 2-3. All other games postponed, cold. Drive Down to our yard. Just across the tracks on Greenwood. We have n modern up-to-date paint and build ers' hard ware depart ment. Van Petten Lumber Company Phone. Main 732 "Good Service Quick" .... .S, " ? ?" " won his fifth straight victory hv ht. wnuii vou near or '. . . n the western n.rt wiicinnau " to 2 in nf ti. .i... i ...,.. ..!.::.? tne iirst gamo or a double header. of La Clrunde," he said, by way of 1 2" 8 "J?U.,,!0? "versed the cle provlng the flno publicity that has c""on,by 3, la count " benefitted this section. nas mound duel with Bruco Cunningham. Itlncn Praises Bins Brandt's victory, gained through a E. n. Bingo, school board member t,lrM r"."y '" t.ho flrat lnnln"f' and a new Hl-Dad. th7 C w" notable because It gave, him one speaker on the 'program. Prefacing his . . K , lnB'1 w'u, Bbl! more serious remarks with a nu,,S ! ? wln " '""t season. Cincinnati won of witty observations, Mr. Hlngo alo ' tho "eco;"1 K0,ne wltn th0 Ma ot calletl attention to the character of PftM'nK locomollvo which sent forth the boys who ongago In competition ? c,"V.lt ."m?k0 i, nltle 1110 b,,u ,i,. ih. hi... ..... ........ L 5!2 'rom Berger's view. What looked like all of tho columns of stories given !" '!y WM " double to h. H. S. athletics, Mr. Bingo ad- . i?r ,Rou",h "J" ,"rV0 ". w mn" mltted lie had onlv saved nii,, nV,.ii Doubles by Hcndrlck and Hoathcoto clipping. That one told of statements , ,, 110 elgl,t" brouKlit the deciding from Ontario people following thflilai',y' ,, ., , , fooLhnll ui.n, A.r i.. ,.. ... .... Threo other National leaouo names offect that tho La Oraiulo team rank- ; """""h' the same fate us two In tho ed as tho cleanest and best eleven Am"rlc"". giving way to cold and wet American At Chaclgo a, Philadelphia 6. At Detroit 2. Boston 0. All other games .postponed. Huskies Win Easily FromO.S.C.,18to4 eliminating the troublesome "byes." ,' ,ew "ent nantleIS to hit a ball over uary. secretary of the .Oregon State "sul ""a- wou 111 ague rara w-iiwji associauon, was inform- i 1 ing all high schools la the state that President Alva Bradley .and .General at the next basketball tournament in ' Manager BlUy Evans, .of the Indians, Salem, the new regulations' .wlU be in t picked Joe from ao all.-star .Cleveland effect. The change. Agreed upon at'andhrt team In 1828 and assigned a meeting of the . board of "control. ! nlm to Frederick, Md.," In .the Blue! was sam to nave been equally Dleas-! nlage league for -more experience. Ing to coaches and athletes. I He finished the IS29 season .there All teams wllf bave'an eaual num. ! and batted -.301. .The following .year bcr of games to play, since byes will I he was with -Terre Haute In the Three be abolished. It was explained that I league where he led .the league ..mi. win ue more rair i wim a avi .oattlng avrage; inan tne i-team set-up In which Evans thereupon decided to give .nuJ. uivcu a oet- vosmuc a trial in .last .company, and ter chance than the other eight. took him along for .training ,thla .jh?,0ry.?n?.uncf.da.tutll?iame tlme, spring. .Vosmik bombarded the offer that starting with the 1932 season. I ingS t pitchers during the training tti,1 iTrhla?"CJraC and in ""en tnf test oT!inI Pm?nf Jli i"-?,a.yVe.n.t- was administered he first dav. with i i. rK'r.p088"1 wltb ?lyln8 color- succeeding day. The 1932 meet will be held at Cor vallls. and the 1933 relays wlU go to Eugene. Heavyweight Fight Contract Signed DIXON, FIRP0 GO 10 ROUNDS TO DEADLOCK PORTLAND, Ore., May 13 Ml Georgle Dixon, Portland negro, ond Young Pirpo.' .former Burke Ida., miner, fought ten slashing and high ly interesting rounds to a draw here last night before a large crowd at: CORVALLIS. Ore., May 13 lPI Washington overwhelmed Oregon Btato il8 to 4 In winning the second game of their conference baseball scries here yestorduy. The State's pitching staff were helpless before wie nussv oaliers, wno piled up a total of 19 hits. The scoro: p. w K Washington is lo 4 Oregon 8tato 4 7 4 Putnam and Hurtnott: Woodward. Kate. Lundberg, Dunkelbareer. Huifhen and Keeina, Mack. i played by them that yoar. Ploying j tho game fairly end' cleanly is far ! more Important than winning by un : certain methods, ho pointed out, and i ho thoroughly congratulated the boys : on their 1030-31 record. no also oxpressed himself as of the' opinion mat tiio talk o "ovor-emph. I asls" of sports Is of an erroneous na-' , lure. Health Is of as great an lm' '.xirtance as doveloped mentality, ho Isald, stating that without the one,! j mo ouior usually is of little, help to weather. American Horse Among Favorites NEWMARKET, Eng.. May 13 W Tho possibility of an American bred ond owned horso winning the Epsom ,J)owiis derby was seen today as Wll llum Woodward's Sir Andrew galloped to a lonfflli victory In tho Nnw..,.t-lr..l. mo man or womun in their Mr.i,.i, , umcs uir inrce-year-o do. defcatinit will. III. no . I lAll n.ltn. .....I... TIIVK IIK.Ol'S PIM A SPOKANE. May 13 Ml Ted Thye Portland lienvywelght took two fulls out or three rrom Stanley Pluta, im. volina. Neb., In tho reutiirn limit. ,.r a wrcHtllng cord hwe last nighl. Thyo weighed ion, JlDtn 205. Robin Reed. 162. Portland, former Olympic champion, and Oeorgo Ma honey. 166. Spokane, stole Hie show Irom the headllnera. Recti took two consecutlvo toIlH. In tho third Reed dumped Mahouey to the floor with a body slum. in tho fourth Mahoney come out groggy and Reed put his shoulders to tho mat. Alan Howard, another Notro Dame product, has been iulrl,i i, ... couching stnrr or the University or I North Carolina. STAGES LEAVE I'Vom Vm ner of Klin and Jefferson WALLOWA VALLEY COACHES NEW. SCHEDULE EFFECTIVE JUNE 1 Leave La Grande for Joseph and Way Points 9:45 A.M. 4:00 1'. M. 9: IS A. M. Makes Direct Connection at Enterprise for Lcwiston and Spokane. 'OU I.M OIIJIATION CALL MAIN 799 ten other derby ollgibles. Behind him lie left the second favorite for the derby, Ooyecas, who ran second to tho dorby fuvorlta Cnineronlan In tho two thousand guineas hero last month. Sir Andiow was only tho second choice today, the fuvorlto, Llukboy IlnlHlilug second. Revelllon was third. air Andrew was ridden by P HmiN. Icy, who probably will have tho leg up on him in tho derby. His odds in mo ueruy luturo books, to be run Juno 3. wcro 40 to 1 today but i, wim i-ousiacrcu prouauio they would bo lowered. Sir Andrew made tho nillo and a quarter In 2:00. OLMSTED LEAVES PRISON SEATTLE. May 13 im Kmllln. Roy Olmsted, central figure In the famous Olmsted liquor consDlracv case, stepped from the MoNell Island federal -prison launch at Stellacoom landing Tuesday, free after four years Imprisonment. . His wife Elsie met him at the dock and they left for Seattle, Olmsted sold ho won through with bootlegging. "I'm starting fresh. I bear no grudgoo," he said. "Just what I will do I don't know. I'm going home, to stay there for a wiine in privacy. CLEVELAND, May 13 VP) Any doubt that' the heavyweight cham pionship fight between Max Schmel- insr and W L ''Yniinw" RtriHiin. 1"ou "S"" large crown at WoguirnotWbeeld"nS remov'rdaT , $2$ Soiiaro GordPn rnmnratlnn f nhtn FIrP? fOT a. COUIlt Of tWO in the S?fS.ft. , oAhe t;TutpVryD6kSaknlh3 on passed" sar:;!...?W points with a tattoo flat guarantee of 6000 for the hn.7 i iro.m "f le" "on 8 c.nln through. Ihb commission iMion,i S tk. ...i ul lne contest to onset tne ad i'l'l PeneniofhTtrece.e The i !; 5! "f, rocelDts. ond build 20.000 or 1 ""'. :"lu "H seals to remain the city's property. Willamette Wins In West Division SALEM, Ore.. May 13 (IP) Andy Peterson. Willamette university pitch er, allowed Pacific university three hits and one run while his team mutes piled up 20 tallies here yesterr day, thereby clinching the western division championship of the North west conference. Willamette scored 11 runs In the eighth Inning, bat ting through the batting order .be fore a putout was scored. The score: R. h. E. Pacific 13 4 Willomotte "20 22 '2 Atcheson. Cone and CrltchflolH Peterson and Messenger. Ed Ronkln: Maryland bnsicethnii star, counted 11 goals In four gaines uiu mie lacrosse team COMPETITION Pennsylvania ond Cornell, who used to fight It our for the J. C. A. A. A. A. track and field honors. JL-o ... .nn sion-'siar to his interviewer.' Ens mi.-!I ford thi. May at Franklin field, even up a good man In Osborn. whowai though there: Is little or no prospect of stopping the parade of the Far Westerners to, another team line. Lawson Robertson has the flashiest band of runners at Penn since the palmy days of Ted Meredith, Don Llpplncott, Patterson and McCurdy. Carr and, Healey. quarter-mllers; Kerr, half-muer; McKnlff and Coan, mllers, all figure io contribute points to Penn's total. Meanwhile the vet eran Jack Moakley has turned up a quartet .of t ew : Cornell distance stars who came .close to upsetting Penn in the four-mile relay; besides some good-looking talent-In the hurdles and field, events. -The answer seems .to be an Andy esque "Yes and No," so far as the effectiveness-. .and effect of the new major league baseball is concerned. its a great help to the pitcher when Wes Ferrell twirls a no-hlt game or Freddy Fitzslmmons holds tbe hard-hitting Braves to a brace .of bingles. . . it's lust as lively as the old .sphere on the day that the Browns scorea .eignt runs in tne ninth, only .w nave .t.nem wasieu Dy a L-ieveiana rally, or on the afternoon that Rogers Hornsby smacks off three straight homers. In short, the eood Ditchers are .still good and the heavy hitters are doing their customary damage, with i blno's opinion, sliced few conspicuous exceptions. .with us." Root dcesri't think the St. Louis Cardinals will repeat their pennant victory, because "It lsn:t their year" and as lar as the Boston Braves are concerned, "they always look good In the early season." MOKE OPINION'S The new Ball was a big help to Ruze Walberg of the Athletics un J til he blew up one recent ternoon against the crippled Yankees. Al Simmons didn't blame the hall for his early batting slump and promptly snapped out of It with a characteristic blast of long ranie firing against the Washington Sen. ators. - John Arnold Heydler, the Nation al league's chief executive, thinks the raised stitches have been a boon to the twlrlers, but that doesn't explain why Dazzy Van&A George Earnshaw and a number oi other aces have been bumped around. - " Lefty Grove doesn't notice any difference In his stuff, which he says Is good or bad, according to what kind of a day he Is having on tho mound. ' '' From a divan Babe Ruth sees no effect of the new ball on his own hitting, but roars defiance' at the rules-makers who ruled out tho I riflce fly and thereby. In the Bam- oig chunk I frcm his batting average. at his opponent. 'Dixon superb condition and fought one the best fights of -his oareer. The fight was a classic for hard punch, ing and action. Al iTrumans, San Diego welter weight, yon a six round decision over Bart Sampson, Los Angeles: Jumbo uavtes, victoria, B. ,c Junior light- ugnvweignt, wok a -sue round ueel slon from Johnny Garvey, Los An golcs, .and Mickey Tradd, Spokane ugnkweignt, .won a iour-rouna dect slpn from Don Mack, Portland. ii.iKi: in iti;kkliks PIATRA NEAMTZ, Rumania Vfl Alter 40 years' labor tho well-known Rumanian lepldopelrlst, Canidscha. Iuib iirrsenU'd to the museum of Oru iHUl'.enchtl a valuable cnltecLInn .if btittvi'Mies, Including 8000 different iHicrolepldoptcru, many very raro. C. It. Il:.i .u.VV.WS WALKS .MILK TO ASM . VI. MKHTINd TOPEKA. Kun. When W. B. Storey, president of the Atchison. l'i)ickn tt Santa Fo railroad, attends annual stockholders' meeting here he Invariably walks from his private car to the Santa Fe building, a distance or nearly a mile. At the recent meeting most of his Irllow oniciiiis chose to ride, but Mr. Storey braved tho chill, drlxzllng aln at a brisk clip. . Oklahoma City. In -organized base ball for 25 years, has won but two it-miauls. I STANTST.ATTS 7RV.Q7Trn rvwTvrn "I I '-" - -.-.Av-y VVlTlllIU I v J ' . . i - -'.!-. i.'.frjrib.t-, .' I ..... if i vv.iii " 3 Av lf1 M'W ',iiSii Mi k ii ' v V & I j.v - . , s. i (, w MAl'RKKN ORCl'TT TO TBV AGAIN WEW YORK, May 13 IPi Maureen Orcutt has decided to -try again for 1,110 ..prmiin women s gon cnampion- shlp which will be held this year at Portmornock, Ireland. . She will sail for Europe May 20. Miss Orcutt.. four-times metroDoli tan charnpjon, .ipade her first start in the British classic last year at rormoy, suiiering eitnuuation In the fifth round at the hands of Enid WU son, one of England's foremost .worn en exponents 01 tne game. 'SS'fS. Slunuiuu. Zlivsko, 60-.vir-iid Polish nrestlrr iulernallnnal lilinr, nlll meet Charles AVeslenherg here Thiindnv evcnlns al 8 o'clock nt bigles hull, .biko Is plclured nbove. ' Sport Slants . . Rv Alnll J. nnnl.l A year ago when Robert L. (Dink) Templeton was leaving the cloistered confines of Cambridge, he remarked that a lad named Eastman, Ben East- man to .be .exact, probablywould .pe heard .from -.before another season rolled around In track and field com petition. - - . The Stanford coach -knew what he was talking about. Ben .Eastman has neen running wild on the Pacific coast and .will come .east for the In- tercolleglates at Franklin field her alded as one of the best young mid dle distance runners to appear In years. Eastman, in his sophomore year, has been clocked In competition in 48 flat for the quarter and 1:53 for the half. He has just nbout cleaned UD' on tne coast Dut cleaning up in the east Is something else, good as this youne- er unquestipnaoiy is. Templetqn probably will confine Eastman to one event but he will find plenty of opposition In cither tne 440 or 880. . The auarter-mllera of nrnrt. a ability are : especially plentiful at Pennsylvania and Harvard. If East man should elect a' try at this distance. In the 880. waiting for him. Is the 1930 champion. Russell Chapman of Bates, among others. Chapman was timed 1 :62.4 In winning the half mile last year. CY STILL TOO OI.I It .would have been bigger and bet tern news for the army If Its board of officers, after its second Investiga tion, had proved Cadet Cy Letzelter was- younger than It was suspected and therefore eligible to resume com petition as a fast running halfback this fall. instead It was left for the hesd MALTED IN VACUUM-THEN VACUUM PACKED-FLAVOR LIKE MAIT NEVER KNW BEFORE S7ZS ,ike! MaU then VACUUM PAfKFn n , 8' , Ma,ted in vacuum- more" than other -onH a. iV.. " .cye costs - Buckeye you're missing something. t nn If you haven't trtA ..it7i.u was .pi 1 or wie nead I mm -r . xcpaii. couch. B..ph irvine s, Many Bargains Listed on Want Ad Page 1