April 29, 1932 Page Three _■ * J.UXCC QUAKES BEAT RALEIGH AND LOSE TO DURHAM Durham Scores Eight Runs In Two Innings To Win, 11-7 Hooks Gets Homer, Two Singles, and Base on in Five Trips to Plate Bails A two-iiiiiiiig rally which brought eight runs, gave Durham a 11-7 vic tory over the local high nine at Dur ham in the first conference game of the season. With Goldsboro leading 5-1 in the fourth frame, Durham started a hitting barrage which brought them seven safeties and eight runs in two times at bat. A scorching line drive by ^‘Bull” Hooks over the short left-field fence was the only homer of the game. Two singles and a base on balls made his average .750 for the game. Pope, Durham outfielder, made three hits—two of them doubles. Mason, Mills, Batson, and Worrell got two singles each. Hardy was in the box for Golds- HIGH TRACKSTERS FAIL TO BECOME COUNTY CHAMPIONS boro until the fifth inning, when he was relieved by Allred. Six hits were made oif Hardy and five off Allred. Goldsboro got seven hits in the first five innings and then made only two in the last four, Durham had one hit at the start of the fourth but the ninth inning saw them with eleven. Ross, lefthander, pitched for Dur ham. With fine support he pulled himself out of several bad holes. Hardy with three men on bases in the fourth fanned Ross after having walked the preceding batter. Score by innings: Goldsboro 202 210 000— 7 Durham 001 441 100—11 High Point Saturday, April 16, two High Point athletic teams captured state titles. Abel Byrons, tennis star, took the state singles championship. The High Point track team nosed out Charlotte, who had ruled over the high track teams for years, by 391/^-36 score. Byron’s victory is noteworthy for the fact that the High Point High School has no ten nis coach. Hardy Features As Local Nine Licks Raleigh, 7 to 2 Bennett Shannon Hits Double With the Bases Loaded and Scores Three Men John Cooper Is Winner in Three Events SPORT QUAKES DEFEAT WARSAW SCHOOL BY 10-7 SCORES Four Runs Are Made By Locals in Eighth Inning After running away with the boys’ part of the County Track Meet, the local high track team lost to Mt. Olive when the Goldsboro girls failed to score a point. John Cooper was individual high scorer. He won the 100-yard dash, the 220-yard dash, and was anchor man on the high teams which won the relays. Dick Thornton won, the broad jump and ran second place on the relay team. Third place in the 100- yard dash and second in the broad jump went to Merle Rose, another member of the relay team. George Hooks won the shot put, which added five more points to Quakes’ total; while Jack Hardy took second in the 440 and ‘‘Red” Langston, third in the 880. M!ari iner was the fourth member of the relay team. The real name of Jim Londos, heavyweight wrestling champion, is Christopher Theofelis. Babe Ruth holds the record for playing in World Series games. Thirty-seven times has his name been on the box score of the world Bennett Shannon’s smashing double with two men on in the eighth inning gave the local high team a 10-7 decision over Warsaw. Handicapped by the loss of San ford Peele, and L. D. Batson, the Quakes played erratic ball at times. George Hooks made three hits in three times at bat. Chub Peele had two singles to his credit and Kannan got several walks and one hit. For Warsaw, Blackburn, Philips, and Buck each got a triple and one or two runs. Register made a run also. Coach Bullock used three pitchers, tillred started and relinquished his A perfect day at bat and almost a perfect one on the mound by Jack Hardy led the Quake baseball team to an easy victory over the Raleigh High nine in the first conference home game. The home team got only seven hits off the Raleigh pitchers but they made every hit count for a ruii. Raleigh got six hits but in only one inning did two of them go to together, I Hardy got three hits, a walk, I and a sacrifice bunt, while Page, ^ Raleigh catcher, led his teammates with two safeties and a base on balls in four trips to the plate. Sanford Peele was the only player on either team to score two runs. Score by Innings: Raleigh olO 000 001—2 Goldsboro OOO 411 Olx—7 Summary—Two base hit, Shannon; stolen bases, S. Peele 2, Hardy 3, Shan non 1, Kannan 1, Pate 1, Hanna 2. Sacrifices, Hardy. Double plays, S. Peele to N. Peele. Left on bases. Ra leigh 11; Goldsboro 10. Raleigh Ab R H 0 A E Massey, cf . 4 0 0 3 0 0 Frazier, 3b .. 4 0 0 0 3 0 Chapel, 2b . 5 0 0 4 1 1 Pate, rf ... 3 0 1 0 0 1 Hanna, If . 3 1 0 0 0 0 Ellen, lb 2 0 1 6 1 1 Hilig, lb 1 0 1 1 0 1 Page, c 3 0 2 7 0 0 Porter, ss . 3 0 0 3 3 0 Straughn, p ... 1 0 0 0 0 0 Hill, p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Paul, p .. 3 0 1 0 6 0 ' xAustin .. 0 1 0 0 0 0 Totals 32 2 6 24 14 4 xBatted for Massey in 9th. Goi.dsboro Ab R H 0 A E Batson, If . 4 0 0 4 1 1 N. Peele, 2b 4 1 0 3 3 0 S. Peele, lb .... 3 2 1 10 1 0 Hooks, c 3 1 1 3 0 0 Hardy, p 3 1 3 0 4 0 Worrell, 3b 4 1 0 1 4 0 Shannon, cf ... 3 1 1 1 0 0 Kannon, rf 2 0 0 2 0 0 Starr, ss 0 1 3 1 2 Totals ... 7 7 27 14 3 classic. jiio There are six officials in profes- Creech in the seventh. Hardy sional ice hockey. They are referee, I inning to finish the Sallie Privette Is Captain At a meeting of the girls’ basket ball squad on April 11, Sallie B. Privette was elected captain and Frances Massey, business manager for next year. Miss Currie thanked the members of the squad for their royal support during the season and also said that she felt the team had had a very successful year even though it didn’t win every game. assistant re f e r e e, timekeeper, penalty recorder and scorer, and two umpires. ' A1 Simmons hit two home runs for the Philadelphia Athletics in the 1931 World Series —one in the first game and one in the third. The late Doctor John L. Rich mond is supposed to have been the first left-handed pitcher in league baseball. This same Richmond pitched the first no-hit, no-run, no-player- reaching-first-base game on record. It happened in 1880, when he twirled for the Worchester l^ational League Club. Earl Smith, Houston outfielder, has been playing baseball for 21 years and not once has his average fallen below .800. Bets at the race tracks are $40,- 000,000 less than last year. Hollingberry of Washington State is the only big-college coach who never went to college. Sport Stary Magazine. game. W. P. ROSE BUILDERS AND SUPPLY CO. SAND, GRAVEL, BRICKS TILE, PAINTS, ETC. Office North James Street The average high school baseball IDlayer has speed, a quick eye, and an eagerness to play, but few of them know the finer points—^the right way to hit, to field the ball, play the runner, and run the bases. This comes from Coach W, P. Coughlin of Lafayette College, who offers some of the smart baseball he has been handing out to college teams for years to high school play ers of today, in the May American Boy magazine. The average high school player jias three hitting faults. Coach Coughlin says. They are: He pulls away with his forward foot; he hasn’t good control of his bat; and he goes after bad ones. The big fault with infielders is that they let the ball play them; and with outfielders the fact that they hang on to the ball too long and don’t always throw to the nearest base ahead of the runner. —American Boy Magazine. \^\ V i i ^ D>OP As^ the paper goes to press a peculiar situation exists in the East ern Conference High School Base ball Association. Four schools have entered teams and each has won every home game and lost every game not at home, Durham opened the season with a 9-3 win over Raleigh and then trounced Goldsboro 7-11; Durham journeyed to Raleigh, where the caipital city boys gave them the works to the tune of 8-3. Fayette ville went to Raleigh and lost 5-1. Raleigh came to Goldsboro and was beaten 7-2. j^ow Durham leads with a .666 average; Raleigh and Goldsboro have .500 averages and Fayetteville .000. If the present vogue of winning home games continues, the league will end in a draw. LOCAL HIGH BEATS SMITHFIELD, 12 TO 5 FOR SEVENTH WIN The secretary bird is so called from its crest, which suggests a bunch of quills behind the ear. Both Teams Score By ning Numbers In- April Twenty-ninth FAYETTEVILLE VS. GOLDSBORO Griffin Park 3:30 Adm. 15c - 25c Making seven wins in eight starts, the Goldsboro High Quakes beat the Smithfield school baseball team 12-5, April 20. Alert base running brought the locals 12 runs on 11 hits. Allred held the visitors hitless for the first two innings, while the Quakes also had two no-hit innings. The first inning saw the home team with one run scored by Hardy, which was increased to three as All- red and Starr came home in the second inning. Having gotten one in the first, and two in the second the locals proceed ed to get three more in the third on one hit, Peele got a triple; Hardy was walked; and both scored as the shortsop errored Shannon’s ground er. And as the catcher missed one. Shannon scored. ]^^ot to be outdone Smithfield scored four in the fourth. Brock QUAKES GET TEN HITS AND BEAT SELMA HIGH, 10-1 Only Two Hifs Are Made Off Local Pitchers During Game Six hits in the fifth inning gave Goldsboro a 10-1 decision over the Selma High School nine. I he Quakes’ first score came in the ninth when Batson scored on S. Peele’s long drive to right field, Sanford Peele made it 7-0 when he came in on J ack Hardy’s two-base hit. In the fifth frame Peele again got a hit and was followed by Jack Haidy, who was walked, W^orrell, Shannon, Kannan, Starr, and Allred each in succession got singles to score six runs. Selma got only two hits. She got the first one in the sixth lead off with a texas leaguer over short. Parish sacrificed to send him to second from which he scored on McMillan’s hit. Jack Hardy, Sanford Peele, and Bennett Shannon (/*>3h got two hits. Selma made one error and Goldsboro none. scored Grimes and Powell with a double to the left field fence. Brock scored on Ellis’ hit and Ellis did likewise, Daughtry singled. Three^ more for the locals came in the ninth as Starr, Hawley, and Hardy scored. May Third DURHAM vs. GOLDSBORO Griffin Park 3:30 Adm. 15c - 25c