Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / May 22, 1930, edition 1 / Page 3
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1930 RALEIGH WINNER OVER BULL CITY! High Baseball Teams Clash Here For Class A Championship. With Allen Bailey pitching shut-out ball, Raleigh high beat Durham here yesterday 5-0, and thereby won the eastern title and right to play Charlotte high here Saturday afternoon at 3 o'clock for the class A high school baseball championship of the state. Pitcher Bailey hogged the limelight by a large margin, but got fast and consistent support from the whole smart Raleigh nine. Bailey held Durham to three hits, one an infield tap, and never let a Durham man get as far even as third. Not content with the pitching glory, he hit a triple and two singles for four times up, and drove in three' of Raleigh's five runs. The smart Durham team exe cuted three double plays -and played consistently good ball afield, but couldn't find Bailey for the hits necessary to win. Box score: Raleigh Paris, ss Womble, 3b .... Rand, 2b ... .. . Bailey, p Reeves, lb . ...... Scales, cf ........... Page, c .... .. Thompson, rf Massey, If Totals AB .. 5 ' .'. 2 .. 4 ...4 4 ; ...4 4 .;:'-.3 R 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 H 2 0 2 ;3 1, 0 1 0 1 E 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 .34 5 10 2 Wednesday, May 21, Durham AB R H E G. Pope, cf 4 . 0 1- 0 Lloyd, 2b ...r,...:...:..:.. 4 . 0 0 1 Goodwin, ss ...i 3 0 0 1 Johns, lb 3 0 1 6 Dave, If . 3 0 1 - 0 Giobw, c : 0 0 0 n. Pope, rf 3 0 0 0 Cheek,-3b .. . 3 0 0 1 Harris, p .: 3 0 0 0 'Totals 30 0 3 3 Score by innings: , Raleigh ... ... .1. . 103 001 0005 Durham 000 000 0000 Summary: Three-base hits: Bailey, Rand. Stolen base: Thompson. Double plays: Har ris to Lloyd to Cheek, Cheek to Harris to Lloyd, Goodwin to Lloyd to Johns, Womble to Rand to Reeves. Sacrifices : Womble (2). Base on balls : by Bailey 3 Harris 1. Struck out : by Bailey 7; by Harris 4. Passed ball, Page. WildVtch, Harris. Left on base : Raleigh 5 ; Durham 6. Umpires: Sapp and Magner. Time: 1:47. V ANNUAL CHECKER TOURNEY PLANNED The eleventh annual tourney of the North Carolina Checker Association will take place at Laurinburg on July 4 and 5,at was announced here yesterday by Edward Scheidt, secretary of the association. . Each year North Carolina's strongest checker players gather in a meet to determine the check er championship of the state. It has been held by Scheidt for the nast two years. In 1928 he defeated the late George Ander son of Salisbury for the honor. and last year he won in the finals from Curtis Efird of Albemarle. Former champions who will figure prominently 'in the tour- nev are H. O. McNair of Max- ton, Coit M. Robinson of Lowell, and Harry Anderson of Win ston-Salem. Other strong play ers who will be out to win are: TWri xr MfTntvre of Laurin- burg, I. F. Sampson of Winston n,is Efird of Albe- marie, J. P. Murray of Moyock D. W. Freeman of Durham and A. V Rnwen and C. C. Gunn, both of Raleigh. Looking Them Over by Browning Roach It looks as though the 9.4 clocking of Frank Wykoff, Cali fornia sprinter, will go unrecog nized for a time yet. His per formance was too recent for con sideration by the International Amateur Athletic Federation. Sprint records; like a well known brand of Kentucky bur ley, evidently must be aged in the wood before they are to be given to the public. - . Because he used starting blocks, George Simpson's time of 9 2-5 last year was not recog nized at. the I. A. A. F. meeting at Berlin Tuesday. Eddie Tolan, University of Michigan negro, was officially hailed as the 100 yard champ. His mark of 9.5 in the western conference cham pionships at Evanston, 111., May 25, 1929, met with the approval of the I. A. A. F. and was speci fied as the only mark to come under the former 9.6 record which has been equaled on sev eral occasions. Charlie Paddock once ran the J 00 in 9.5, but at that time tenth-second watches were not approved by the I. A. A. F. and his time was thrown out. ; Three other records of inter est made by American athletes are : 163 feet 8 inches for the discus throw made by Eric Krenz of Stanford; 14 feet, li2 inches for the pole vault made by Lee Barnes, former U. S. Q star : and 3 minutes" 13.4 sec onds for the one-mile relay made by the American Olympic quar tet nr a dual meet with Great Britain shortly, after the last Olympics. ""' To appreciate properly the above records take a glance at the Carolina and southern rec ords for the same events. Just about three-quarters of a foot in the vault, 3-10 of a second in the dash, nearly 30 feet in the discus and around 10 seconds in the mile relay. ' A few things that have caught our eye at the ball games this year- Nap Lufty crossing home plate on every trip between his position ait third" and the bench. Jimmie Maus' peg to pitcher when things aren't going to suit him. v Rillv Brown's sveed on the y base lines and his pose at first. Rat Whitehead's delivery to first, or home, or any old place from any old position. Jimmie Maus' whistle. Piggy Cotter's chatter rivals that of Billy Brown. Cecil Longest's physique and running form. Shorty Branch's luck-shots over second. Obie Davis' swing at a high outside ball. ? Phil Sher's griping on the bench and with reason. Cloyd Blythe's contented ex pression when pinch-hitting. Casey Jackson I'll bite what? The whole squad, when at bat looking toward the bench for Ashmore's signal when the count is two strikes and one ball. Would-be big leaguers fishing for applause by snagging, pop ups in the stands. The Gentlemen of the Press- taking a ballot to decide between a hit or an error the hits usual ly get it. v Players, managers, base um pires and base coaches contin ually craning their necks toward the sections of the stands where the females are most abundant, and sometimes emitting sighs for field glasses. THE DAILY Racquet J ' The Carolina Tennis team has ful season. After having defeated all the good teams in the state by large scores, the team took a trip through the South in search of more opposition. The Tar Heel racqueteers won all their matches but one there, defeating the U. of Tennessee 5-0, Sewanee 4-2, Georgia Tech 7-0, U. of Alabama 4-3, and Jtied the strong Tulane team 3-3. The team has won 12 matches, tied one, and lost none, this giving them undisputed claim to Carolina Racquetmen To Give Exhibition Match At Sedgefield ' The Sedgefield Country Club has invited three varsity and three freshman tennis players of Carolina to give an exhibition match on the club courts this Sunday. Hinky Hendlin will oppose Bryan : Grant, southern men's champ; in one match ; Phil Lis kin will meet Wilmer Hines southern 'junior champ, in an other; and Captain Bill Grant other ; and Captain Bill Merr itt will play Lenoir Wright,' Vir ginia prep school champ, in the final siherles match. Hendlin and Liskin will meet Grant and Hines in the only doubles match of the afternoon. PROFESSOR AIDS IN TRACK WORK All during the past track sea son J. P. Harland, professor of archaeology here, has been as sisting in coaching sprinters and others in starts. Mr. Harland was a member of the class of 1913 at Princeton University and ran the 100 and 220 yard dashes for that school. Although his chief interest at the present is archaeology, Mr. Har land says that he gets quite a bit of nleasure by assisting the track coaches here. Particularly with Charlie Far mer has Mr. Harland been work ing, and he intends to continue to work with him for the rest of this quarter since Carolina's 10 point man is planning to enter the A. A. U. Amateur Champion shin meet .in Chicago about June 14. j New Track Records Three more new world's rec ords were added last week to Wykoff 's 100-yard record "of 9.4 without starting blocks. The V records were in the shot put, discus throw, and mile run. Eric Krenz, giant blonde weightman of Stanford Univer sity, hurled the discus 167 feet 5 inches, breaking his own world record by over three feet, in the annual California intercollegiate meet. ;': ' x Herman Brix, former Univer sity of Washington weight star representing the Los Angeles A. C, r' heaved:, the shot 52 feet 4 i nches in i a meet' " last week, breaking the former mark by several inches. " " Crowley,!5 running for "Allen town Preparatory School of Al lentown, Pa., - in the University of Pennsylvania Interscholastics last Saturday, broke the accept ed world's : schoolboy record for the mile, set by Bill Cox of Mer cersburg Academy in 1924, when he sped over the distance iri 4 minutes 21.4 seconds. TAR HEEL Stars ( X J ft -v X - s - - gone through a most success the state title. Athletic Pictures Members of athletic teams .... and squads who have had their pictures taken this year for the News Bureau or Yackety Yack may get copies by calling at the Tar Heel office between 4 and 5 p. m. today and tomorrow. H. J. Galland Tennis Players Here Take Up Pajama Fad People sleep in pajamas,, go to the beaches m ... pajamas, sometimes even walk about the streets in pajamas, and now an aspiring Tar Heel reporter has discovered, that they play tennis in pajamas. Getting up a half hour earlier than usual, hethe aspiring; re porter loke'd out of his window iri Everett yesterday morning and saw . what appeared to be two pa jama-clad figures , playing tennis. Upon closer investiga tion these figures turned out to be Philip K. Kaufman and Ben jamin Winik, two Everett dorm ers. When questioned, the two nature lovers finally admitted that they arose at 6 :30 every morning and indulged in two sets of strenuous tennis before going to classes. They go to sleep each night with their tennis racquets be neath their pillows so that when the alarm rings at 6 : 30, they have merely to put on their slip pers, grab their racquets, and they are ready -for action. V If this fad turns into a gen eral habit, the school will be come a training ground for ten nis players in the embryo. It is rumored that a scout for the U. S. Davis Cup squad' has been seen snooping about the school courts in the early hours of the morning looking for ma terial. SPARROW'S POOL , ATTRACTS MANY (Continued from first page) : customed to wearing suits when they . swim, at home may rent one of the popular Jantzen suits for a quarter, and if he or she likes it well enough, there are suits on sale at a nominal price. And lastly,1 let's not forget the refreshment stand, where such intoxicating liquors as Coca Cola and Orange are sold, along with, such bad habits as Her shey's, Milky Ways, and the brands of cigarettes, such as "I'd walk a mile.:. for, a," "Not a Cough in a carload,", and "They satisfy." ' - ' . . . So on to Sparrow's, men and boys! ; Bishop Edward Rondthaler of the Moravian church delivered the commencement address of 1896. " Baseball Results AMERICAN New York 7-1; Phila., 16-4. St. Louis 6; Cleveland 5. Boston 2-1 ; Washington 10-6. Detroit 3; Chicago 9. NATIONAL Brooklyn 12; Boston 1. Chicago 3; Pittsburgh 10. Philadelphia 4; New York 11. Cincinnati 2; St. Louis 3. PIEDMONT Durham 12; Raleigh 19. Greensboro 8; High Point 7. Winston 5; Henderson 6. v SALLY Columbia 6; Greenville 12. Macon 6 ; Augusta 3 (at, 6th) . Charlotte 6 ; Asheville 7. ; r Babe Ruth hit three home , runs yesterday in the Yanks' double-header with the Macks. This brings his total for the season up to nine and places him among the leaders in cir cuit clouts. PRESS BOOR HAS IMPORTANT DATA Heer's Book Treats of Income And Wages In South; Clarifies Numerous Questions. (By Jack Riley) "Income and Wages in the South," by Clarence Heer of the University institute . for research in social science, has been issued by the University Press. With the aid of his wife, Dean Car roll, and Professor Oduni, Mr. Heer has . compiled much , valu able statistical data concerning the industrial, and agricultural conditions in the south. . In the last few years the; south has made much progress in in dustry and has gained many new mills and factories. . This spread of , industry in- the south has caused, many questions that call for exact quantitative infor mation rather than speculation and controversy. In the less than 100 pages of the little book by Mr. Heer is given a panoramic picture of the present conditions in the south. Numerous questions that have caused continual contro versy are clarified. The industrial conditions in the south have room for much improvement, but until the criti cal condition of the southern farmers is remedied there is little hope for the industrial worker. All the industrial work ers in the south onlyvmake up about 17 per cent of the popula tion. The greater part are farm ers, and until the farmers get better returns the others must wait. " - For the last eighty years the condition of the southern far mer has been a question of gen eral comment. At present, the author finds, the average income of the south is less than one-half that in the other states. Mr. Heer shows that of the ten states having the largest ratio of rural population, six of these are in the south, and that of the ten states showing the lowest per capita wealth, eight are south ern. Mr. Heer points out that the reason for the low wages is the fact that nearly half the population in the south depends on unprofitable agriculture as a source of livelihood. .' ' So long as there remains the high amount of poorly paid labor in -the south, there will remain. the low rates of income. The only way to better these" condi tions is to better living condi tions and to increase the income of the workers. Track Pictures . Pictures : of both : freshman and varsity traek squads will ;be made at Emerson, field this after roon at 4:30 o'clock. - '-' Grail Installs Officers At a recent meeting of the Order of the Grail, officers for next year were .elected. John Slater was chosen president: Mayne Albright, treasurer; John Clinard, assistant treasurer; and Hayward Weeks, secretary. These men have taken the places of Marion Follin, who was presi dent this year: "Red" Greene, reasurer; Mayne Albright, as sistant treasurer; and Ed Ha- mer, secretary. Nicholas Murray. 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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May 22, 1930, edition 1
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