Tuesday, May 4, l937 Piraclouen hose ARMOUR TECH NEWS in rec Page Three Tennis Eliminated from $oi‘thot’i lwsac and handsome, but the left field ‘ l fence is loo far away. and too many flute Meet to Wheaten, @162 Dunbar Egg“. School Record in Winning ZZG-yard Dash RELAY promos ET A trio of Wheaton quarter milers with a smooth running track team to aid, nosed out the Tech Cinder- men by seven points, 6962 at Stagg- Ficld Saturday afternoon. The meet was won in the linal relay, when Patterson, Peterson, and Pat— tcrson, the same three who had pre- viously swept the 440 event, ran just as fine quarter miles. Dunbar Breaks Record in 220 Armour took nine blue ribbons against six for Wheaten, one of the former being: Dunhar’s record break- ing win in the 220 dash in :22.5, re- placing the old Armour record of $22.7 set by Sturm in 1930. Bing- By Roy Brown So far this season the Tech nincl has had two wins against three losses, but we still think that it is one of the finest teams Coach Kral'l't has molded together in quite some: time. His pitching staif is above par, and so far the men have done all right by themselves in the hitting de— partment. Although a little weak, on the fielding cud the team is stead-i ily improving", and before long,- we’ll be looking for an A4 defense. a x; l l Teachers sure was. a‘ tough game, to lose. As it now stands thci Techawks are on even terms withl the latter, who are at the present1 time holdinLl' a nice substantial leadl in the L‘t‘le Nineteen Conference! Too bad we didn’t join; 1 right up there with them. (fielders have gal in the way of the!‘ others. His is .238. a: c .i. As had as the weather has been the softball tournament is stepping right along, seven games played during the past week, result— ing in the elimination of three of the teams. Leading the tournz‘ment are the senior civils and the junior file pro; l l being softball games, the junior l... gnomes)? lilo Seven finance fire Flagrant Opening the week's schedule oi'l , wave the junior civils a 9 to 0 trounc- ing‘. Most of their runs were made ' the first bracket on a cluster oi' clean hits along; with a few helpful eriora. Six men crdssed the plate for the chemicals in this inning- bc-r LGCLS. (331011 having W") ““m against l [me the inning was finally over. Sev- no losses. Behind them with a win and no losses are the junior mechan- icals, the senior chemicals, the soph electricals, the junior electricals and the junior chemicals. other teams still present but with lower averages are the soph chcms, the se- The x. a, .1. Congratulations are in ol'dcr for the newly pchgcd men to Honor A society. Those who were honored for their athletic prawns-s m'r‘ Log/"Ho. l l l l eral times the civils threatened, but that was as far as they trot, Marshall, the chemical pitcher, doing: a fine job of preventing any clean hingocs. In the fourth the schmiers added two more runs to their score to take an 8-0 1ca(l,' Their final run came in . lnior tire protects, the fresh meteors. the nixth inning. Last week 5 1055 against De Kalb ‘ the junior civils and the senior me(:hs,l Soph Civils Win 6-3 ite 1he fancy pitching: and specucular infield work by Ed Swan- son, the sophomore fire protects lustl to the sure hitting soph civils (373. (7111'! Rob held the firemen to three ). i , , , . .,, . , , _ wtd berDlmuo, mid Km 1 of HM lumelmll runs, while Six of lllS teammates on five hits and two errors in that Chcmlwls inning put the juniors ahead to win. The juniors brought in four Lul- lies in the first of the second on hits, errors, and a long‘ home run by Will ly Kurtz, and the seniors batted around to score five runs in the third. Although both teams were held scorc- less ii. the fourth, each scored once in the following: inning. A home run clear over the fence by George Palka was the junior contribution. The juniors work up in ninth and scored six runs on some well placed hits before an out was made. The seniors, determined to Win. put one run nor the plate, but Showchuk, trying to score from third after Johnson’s fly out, was tagged out at the plate by Irv Gehcl on a beautiful final play. :1: 5r. C.E. (7)vSr. M.L. (5) In one of the best games played no I,‘ ( ’ VMme” and Hc'm'iclmml 'rom . . . . . . I 7" )6 I crossed the plate to score alter num- Ll‘llH week the St‘l’llt)!‘ civds, coming: scoreless after this until the fifth in— ning, when the mechanicals got the first hit all Ikenn, the civil pitcher. it was a triple hy Boehme, and being: followed by Bartusek‘s homer to right, two runs came in to tie up the score. Another run in the seventh for the moths put them in a 3-2 lead. Then came the big ninth in which the civils scored their winning" runs. on singles by .lacdtke, llionn and Manke. ’l‘aladash’s single and R1- man’s triple brought four of the runs in, and then on an error ’l‘aradash rompcd in. in their half of the in- ning the mechs made a stand, but fell two runs short, crossingF the plate only twice, on a triple by Logullu and a homer by l-lurrold. Soph Schmiers in 15-6 Victory The sophomore chemicals, having: learned a lesson in their first game, took the senior electricals down the ham milk a pair 0f firsts in the, new . has/tellmll; Shmmhuil «ml Sl'uzu of . . . . “m5 to the tune of 15 m 6‘ IL was tury dash and the broad jump, while Ted! Bath“?! Avel'at’es lllze ”0” ionm’ R'imcnn for-L iruz-Ic‘ (-roua errors. throne-h will! a ninth mnmg’ ally. a batting: 'pree in the fir two inn- Dunbar duplicated in the 220 Looking over the baiting aver~ tic/"(,M’fl’y I." suiimminq' uml I’ I. (I The civils grouped their hits well, turned in >1 7-5 victory l'dfil WthUS' inns which turned the trick for the straight away and the 220 low ages of the Tech nine up to and in- l, MM?” hum,” ‘ ' i rushinm runs atoms the plate with day WW the WNW lmWhH- Herbs. hurdles. Vandckieft, per uSUal. cluding the De lialb game. we find ‘ ‘ ‘ ' ' timely socks, ltalph Tullg‘ren and In the first inning the (WM load The first inning gave the sophs a copped the shot put but dropped the that pitcher “Willie" Kruse, besides LDOkaA‘ ahead “‘0 $00 tnat l0!" 0i (worm; Prawdmk Wielded powerful 1 off with two runs on “my“. hV six run lead (very mm on the team discus by a scant seven inches. domg Mme fine Work On the mound, mu! sports Will lot In ittmn thlk hats tor thi, uvxls to (111W ("1" ”"V'lManltc and McCarthy, rnd a triple hv taking his turn at bat. Faust paced the mile and two mile against strong competition, taking: seconds in both. Duncan was high point man for Wheaten with first places in the mile and two mile. The Patternon broth» ers amassed a total of 16%: points in the 440, 880, javclin and relay. Field in ideal Condition has taken over the leading poaitioni in the batting department. His avcr- i age is .332, being closely tagged by i Showchuck with .356. ln the third position is Wagner with .318, and following him is his messmnta “Jim- my" Dunne with .251. Pacocha is in fifth place with .250. member in our “Big Six” in “Irv”! In spite of the heavy rain Friday, the track was fast, the weather ideal, and the wind behind the sprinters, which accounted for good times in all the dashes, Bingham got away for a Hood 5 irt in the hundred to turn in the fast time of :10.1, Both enherg's start was slow in the 120 big-h hurdles, hut he took the event in 1'7 secondn flat with Siegfried of Wheaton close behind. In addition to his fine showing in the 100 dash, Bing-ham came within four inchcs of a new Armour record , in the broad jump with a distance of i 2! feet 41“ inches. After a perfect I lakcoii' hr fell back on landing to 103 the norm y distance. Simeon was first again in the high jump. Finnegan Wins Half Mile Finnegan, in good form, won the 880 yard run with time of 2204.? well ahead of his competition. Arm- our took a hard jolt by failing to even tally in the javelin. L. Patter- son of Win-atom threw the javelin 156 foot 8 inches, with Rcihmer eight inches behind. Vandvkicft was six feet in front of his competition with a have of 40 feet 6 inches in the shot, Dixon had little trouble in winning the pole vault at 10 feet 6 inches, While Bing'ham was threatening: the broad jump record the running tally stood at Wheaton 6], Armour 56, and at the conclusion of this event Armour was but two points from a tie, 62-64. Victory or defeat depended on the relay team. Wheaten Wins Relay Ryan, initial runner, led until the ~third turn when Peterson forged ahead to trade the baton three yards ahead. Faust, running hard, but tired from the three miles of previous competition dropped about 15 yards but Deutcr picked up ten against Wellman. Finnegan running anchor Seidenberg, who hits them high, at Bradley. coming; week. On Wednesday, the baseball team travels to and the tennis squad meets North Central there. On Friday, the golf team will play Eastern Teachers at. Southmoor, and the tennis team will ‘ any big league contest, be at Wheaten. Concluding the wet-l: The other ,will he the Saturday baseball gamer, at North Central and the track meet , era! good hits. Elmllm"M ‘ in two of the fire prott-cls‘ three runs. : Steve Finnegan drove: Senior Electricals .lollccl 11-10 In a, game, with thrills enough for the junior; olectricals beat the senior (-lct-triculs, last Wednesday. ll»l0. Althou'rh the s rs hold the edm» in runs and hitw until the ninth, a cluster of six runs I HE delightful effect of smoking Camels with your meals and afterwards has been proved again and again in the great laboratory of human experience. Explorers, champion athletes, people in hazardous out» door work, as well as homes and oliices, find millions of men and women in that Camels get digestion off to a. good start and make the perfect ending to a incalfithn you enjoy Camels, you are rewarded with an increased flow of digestive fluids—alkaline digestive fluids—«so important to good digestion. And you can enjoy Camels as often as you like! Camels don’t get on your nerves. owynwn. in" ~‘.\‘:.“\\;; . lcm Nunhlhirnllna ‘ Tm adash. lh:t'V teams remained The second (Continued on 1mm four) Mary Hillel-to Restaurant 3258 Princeton Ave. Menu changed daily. Home cook- ing. Complete steak or chop dinners, 358. Special 30:: dinner THE BOULEVARD CAFE aim) s. Michigan Ave. m. Victory 935.1 invites You 1... Try Our Special llall' Milli Fed Chicken or Sirloin Steak who in llutlur with French Fried Potatoes and (Inh- smw. ltmliwlim, Scullion. "mm nml mum rm- only. ,. . . . 56 After R:(ln P. M.. Lunch n: 201‘ roueu (MURSES come easier with Camels! Smoking Camels cases tensionwnids digestion EGO. For when you smoke Camels at mealtime and after ward, you encourage a. sense of well-being, contentment. Camels give you a refreshing "lift" in energy when you need it most. Camels never get on your nerves or tire your taste! nus CED-El) SAYS: "Camclssctmcright. Mental work often has an cffccton digcs’ tion too,” adds Miss Josephine O’Neill. "During meals Cam~ cls are a big aid to digestionAftcrmeals they make food seem twice as good." Camels are mild! l3 FLEGHT DIS- held the pace but couldn’t gain WATCHER-"1 Often enough against L. Patterson, DEEP lN 'll'HE BUNGLE FASTNESS ochntral catmymcnls on the SUMMARIES America amid thc'ruins of: a lost city. . . job,” says H. G. ONE MILE RUN—«Won by Duncan (w, , Lawrence T. K. Griswold {mg/:1} has headed Andrews, TWA m t t Al, second: McShaue 1W1, third: t 1 111': MO Patterson lWl, first; expeditions to Tibet, Komodo, the Amazon, and the lost cities of the ancient Mayas. He flight dispatcher. "Camels help my mfifwra‘lgl; canal: L. Patterson (W). lists Camels as one of the necessities on the digestion behave 100 YA“ DAS Wm, by [gingham (m: trail. “At best, eating in the jungle is no its?“ Being mild: gynlm‘r'llAl, zcond; Wellman lWl,third. picnic," says Griswold. “I’ve found that Camels don‘t get lzu Vial!" HIGHSHURDLES—Won by Ruth- smoking Camels is an aid to my digestion. on my nerves," on m.— (At: eizzl‘ried (Wt. second: Vick- ‘ - . - - ' ' em [wk mm, “mi 7.0. Camels ease tensxon'and give me a lift in snor PUT~Won hy Vandek '1; (Al: Reihm- energywhen I need it most.” er l r. second: Gavin (W). third. Dis~ Lanccnlo rm 6 inches. POLE VAULT Won by Dixon IAI: Dun— \VVl, 0 Bruun tAI, third. Height in 6 inches. BBO YARD RUN on by Finnegan (AI: D. Patteraon lWl, second: Denver (Al, third. ’ imewzmzm. HIGH JUMP—Won by Simeon (Al: Lee (W)- secend: Rotheubem (A), third. Height# 5 (-et 8 inches. 226 YARD DASH—Won by Dunbar (Al : Wel— mun (WI, second; Peterson 1W), third. Timevzflflfi. _ MILE RUN—«V1011 by Duncan (W): Faust lAl second: McShaue {W}, third. TimerrIO: DISCUS THRO Won by Gavin (Wl ; Vand- eltieft (A), second; Reihmer (W). third. Dunner—41‘s feet 3 inches. 220 VAR“ LOW HURDLF IA): Vicltors (Wt. Won by Dunbar nd: Rathenbel'iz ’ AA 1, third. Timeg‘ . . . JAVELIN 'l'HROWwWon by . Puttexfion I : eihmer (W), second; Thomas (W), third. Distuncklbfi feet 8 inches. BROAD .VUMP—W'on by Bingham IA); Saig- fn' , neond; Simeon (A), third. DhtuncL721 feet 4 . inches. MXLE RELAY—«Won by Wheatim (Peterson, D: P tte Wellmnn. L. a' erscml.