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Cc-2 SPORTS. CAPABLE DIAMOND, TRACK, LACROSSE TEAMS LIKELY Base Ball Prospects Especially Bright and Stick Aggregation May Be Better Than Expected. Georgetown U. Men in Title Meet. BY H. 8 & whole, C. BYRD. the University of | thought probable. If the Old Liners can get by their first three face the Army at College Park on April Maryland probably will have |26 without having been defeated, they better teams in Spring sports | are likely to go through in good shape. then have repreeented it in sev- eral seasons. By the time the team is ready for its two biggest games, those with Navy In one squad, at least, and Hopkins, it is likely to be good lacrosse, gradustion last year cut a|enough to put up a real battle. wide swath, but even in that it begins | to seem that a capable twelve will be developed. The outlook in base ball is much better than usual and the track squad also is considerably im- proved. It is in base ball that more improve- ment is noted than in any other sport. That is true, anyway, of the practice | held in New York tonight. e Black |Around Athlete, is entered in the shot- 8o far. For several seasons th and Gold nine has not measured up to a very high standard, but, if it goes through its play it is ghowing now, its record at the end of the vear will be much bet- ter than any Maryland nine in recent years has made. Coach Bus for a good pitching staff in Phipps, Batson, Hauver, Millburn and others, and more than the usual number of candidates for the infield and out- field. It seems very much as if the inner works i8_to be constructed of Radice at first, Berger at second, Chal- mers at_short and Gaylor or Derr at thitd. Radice has been moved from seoond to first, and Derr, a shortstop last year, is battling at the hot corner with Gaylor, who regularly A vear ago. Maryland has difficult schedules to play and its record, as far as games won and lost are concerned, may not be any better, possibly not a& good, thi last year, but its squads now give every indication that they should be much | stronger. schedule with the same |run ster Shipley has the assets |to build up a bi | | | eld down the job| and Navy. Wilson also has | are with opponents ‘Three Georgetown athletes are to take part in the Amateur Athletic Union track and field championships to be Sexton, all- | put, while Briggs is to run in the 300- | yard dash, and Kelley in the 1,000-vard Georgetown also expects to send three | or four men to the indoor meet of | West Virginia at Morgantown this com- | ins Saturday. -West Virginia is trying Rflndnnr meet and each year brings to Morgantown several of the best athletes from each section of | the country. | George Washington has completed its foot ball schedule for next Fall by add- | ing games with Salem College and Uni- | versity of Delaware. The other contests | on the Buff and Blue schedule are with | New York Aggies, Iowa, Dickinson, Catholic University, Tulsa University | At least three of the games | that rank among | a chance for a poeition in the infield. | the strongest elevens—Tulsa, Navy and | Rosen and Higgins are likely to do| be the catching, while the outfield prob- ably will be picked from Hetzel, Cronin, Ma", Tansill and Jones ach Epplrr has been working patiently to build up a track squad of some ability and it begins to appear that he is getting somewhere. The squad went through a bad year in 1929, but it is certain to do much better in its coming schedule, notwithstanding that the 1ist probably is the hardest it ever has Attempted. Eppley has a good sprinter, good middle distance men, fair | distance runners, and is far stronger in the field competitions than he w: & year ago, especially since he has a couple of pole vaulters likely to do 11 feet 8 inches or bette one event in which the squad is weak is the high jump, and ‘working to develop somebody ft 1t was in lacrosse that Maryland really expected to take its bumps, as the bulk of strength of last year's fine twelve graduated. However, some of the néw material, members of last year's freshman twelve and one or two men who have néver before played, are developing much more rapidly than was Harold Hodges’ 115 Average Top In Typothetae Bowling League Team Standing. N6t including this week's matches) Typors B I8 Parker-Brawne Fe'in“‘;““ # LRGN ls Frige ks §1 30 Siand. Boy. Co AT R s; dv, %v. 8 odel Print 3 t, Co.. 4f 44 ¢ H Potter o Leéw yer. A7 A ibson Bros... sion o 45 48 Fellow's Forii . Joyee E. Co. 44 45 Typothetae .... 1 Record: mes--Bie Bring Shoo. 603: ing Co., 585; Casion Press, Potomac Electrot: Co., Del'tfl!hnl‘ fi rll’l“?ll:t i£h individual sames—Noack. 172; Bailey, {igh' individual sets—Hodees, 415: Kin ! 8 rikes—Hodges, 57 Wathen, ‘m'am&\m spares_Mischou, Beatty, ine and MuigbAugh. 208 each, < Hl,‘h individual averases—Hodges, 115: Mischou. i11 ox. 111, Averages, WASHINGTON TYPOGRAPHERS. . 228 £ SLUIBS SSESSE ] EEst e & Eenme ] o orrison hr . N PRINTING CO. 3 194 COLUMBIA! e 83 )2 6 4z £ 0 ] _BRAWNER CO. e - 4 8 e L D. . PAPER MANUFACTURING CO. el LT B g NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO. iy d i i STANDARD ENGRAVING CO. nderson, ndefson, 6r. RANSDELL, INC. Vallace . PARKI 8 15 10 1 1 eck "walter Town Towa. The game with Iowa is to played at Iowa City on October 18. | Basket ball and lacrosse seem to be | | team is in need of material it is neces- | so closely allied that when a IAcrosse | chempions, will play their second game | l sary to get out several members of the | basket ball squad. Especially is this| true of defense. In the matter of tac- | tics on offense the two games are about the same, the only difference being that | in lacrosse the ball is handled with a stick instead of with the hands and is thrown into a net instead of into a basket. Incidentally, two years ago Coach Jack Faber at Maryland adopted type of basket ball defense for lacrosse and has had remarkable success with it. Several of Faber's best players have been basket ball men, and now two | basket ball players who have never done | anything in lacrosse are out for the | team and probably will make good 8o similar are the two games that about the only changes necessary are to accustom the players to the bigger field and to develop dexterity in handling & stick and mechanical proficiency in throwm1 a ball with it. All of which, a Bl | | Canada | defeated Joe Sekyra, Dayton, Ohio, foul (1); Phil_Zwick. Cleveland, outpointed | | Johnny Helstein, Buffalo (10). 80 the lacrosse cos t;l; probably would say, i8 enough of MODEL PRINTING CO. CHAS. H. POTTER CO. | [ ] H 7 6 LI X FELLOWSHIP FORUM. 1 7 Chamberigin .1 ] Eorterfield .. Thiell Fights Last Night By the Associnted Press. ST.. LOUIS, March 18.—Primo Ci neéra, Italy, knocked out Chuck W g’m. Indianapolis (2); Chuck Heftner, nver, d_Johnny Kline, Kansas City, drew (10); Jack Horner, St. Louis, outpointed Ivan Laffinéur, France (5). CHICAGO . —Mickey Walker, world | mlameweflhz champion, knocked out | Jimmy Mahoney, Chicago (2), non-| title; Ted Ross, Chicago, outpointed | Edgar Norman, Norway ' (8); Nisse| Ramm, Sweden, defeated Blondy Davis, | Chicago, foul (2). NEW YORK.—AI Singer, New York, stopped Eddie (Kid) Wagner, Philadel- phia (3); Charlie Neison, New York, | outpointed Juan Cepeda, Cuba (6). PHILADELPHIA —Tommy Loughran, Phllldelpl;l:]l, outpointed Jack Rena (10). BOSTON. — Joe Monte, Brockton, Mess., stopped Moise Bogquillon, France (8); 'Phile Rochards, England, out- gnu}udmx'oung Nadeau, Somersworth, @), BUFFALO—Rosy Rosales, Cleveland, NEWARK, N. J-Vince Baltimore, outpointed Alf Ros, Bpain | (10); Stéeve Hamas, Passalc, N. J., stopped Tex Hamer, Texas (2). LOUISVILLE, Ky.— Jack Dugan, mes and | Dundee, ! THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, BUSTING “How I Broke Into BY EARL HEN the long, tiresome grind of the 1028 season, which I played with the San Fran- cisco Seals, had come to an end, I accepted a position with an ofl |in scenery, and prepared to forget all | about base ball for the Winter months. |ing, I glanced over the morning paper and the first thing that came to my eye was that I had been sold to a big |league team! Billy Evans, the famous ampire, and now president of the Cleve- land Americans, had come to the coast and bought me for his Cleveland club. Of course, that changed everything. and instead of forgetting about base ball for the Winter, I could not get it the Major Leagues.” AVERILL, As Told to John F. McCann. company in Los Angeles, for a change | But arriving at the office one morn- | |off my mind. Always there was the | thought—the big chance comes in the Spring. Little did I anticipate I would have such a glorious start. So when I reported Peckinpaugh last Spring I found that conditions were all in my favor. He had no one else to play in center field and the job was mine—if I could hold it “T'll hold it, or bust,” I told myselr. ‘The Detroit Tigers played the Cleve- land club in the opening game of 192, and I was so anxious, knowing that it was the greatest occasion of my base ball career, that the crowd, the setting. everything was forgotten. All my anx: iety was_centered upon that first trip to bat. What would I do? How would fare? Earl Whitehill was on_the mound for the Tigers and when I got into the to Manager | EARL AVERILL OUTFIELDER CLEVELAND_TNDIANS. batter's box, before I realized what was going on, he had two strikes on me. The next one he got a little too good, I | | guess, and I swung! I saw it start and that was all, but I had lifted it over the right-fleld wall for a home run. The center field job |was mine and I finished the season | without missing an inning! | \Copyright, 1930, by North American News- paper Ailiance.) WOLTZ QUINT PLAYS IN TOURNEY TONIGHT Woltz Photographers, defending in the District Amateur Athletic Union basket ball championship tournament tonight when they meet Calvary Drakes in a second-round unlimited class match in the Tech gym at 10 o'clock. The Woltz outfit won its first series game in handy fashion, Brentwood Hawks and Y. M. C. A. meet at Tech at 9 o'clock in another unlimited class match promising bang- up_competition. In all five tourney games are carded this evening and tonight. However, all are to be played at night at Tech ex- cept that between St. Paul's and Chevy Chase girls in the George Washington gym at 5 o'clock. In tourney games last night Jewish Community Center downed Mount Ver- non, 47 to 28, in the unlimited class, ahd in the same division Calvary Meth- odist Episcopal won by default from Fort ashington. Pratt Whirlwinds drubbed Tremonts, 43 to 11, in the 145- pound class; Calvary £agles scored over Night Hawks, 30 to 18, in the 130-pound roup, and Asztecs showed the way to irates, 26 to 21, in the 115-pound clase. ‘The tourney program for this evening and tonight: George Washington Gym. 8t. Paul's vs. Chevy Chase (girls' junior class), 5 o'clock. Tech High Gym. Woilts Photographers vs. Calvary Drakes (unlimited class, second round), 10_o'clock. Brentwood Hawks vs. Y. M. C. A, 0 | o'tlock. | _Boys' Club Optimists vs. Kendall A. C. ( :bvuund class, quarter finals), 8 | ocloe ‘Westerners vs. Noel House (130-pound class), 7 o'clock. Emerson & Orme Pirates are after an uniimited Amateur Athletic Union reg- istered foe for tonight. Pirates have & gym. Oall Lincoln 8125-W after 6:30 pm. Oorinthians nosed out Easterns, 48 to 42, in & hard-fought court game. % ANNEX BOWLERS SPILL L MOST MAPLES, BUT LOSE ‘The leading Annex No. 1 team of the Internal Revenue League lost two games to Special Advisory Committee although outrolling the winners in total pins. Boyle and Brown, with 349 each, were high for the match. ‘The best that Miscellaneous could do was to win the odd game from the last-place Rules and Regulations quint. ;ey}:: of the winners, with 346, was pecial Adjustment dropped two to Consolidated ‘when Ray Lewis of the winners totaled 370 pins for his eve« ing's effort, rsonal Audit continued its winning march with eight wins out of the last nine games, when it took all three from General Counsel. Capt. Culligan and Anchorman Routson: of the winners rolled 348 and 343, respectively, for this match, L i Records. High team gete—Miscellaneous. 1,683, An- nex No. L 1,660; Special Adjusiment Oom- migtee: 2,680, Team Standing. W. L 48 2§ conrolidated 44 28 Gen. Counse 4028 Pert Audy 40 32 Rules & Regul, A 26 32 15 nnex No. 1.. iscellaneous . ’M:. . Com. pec. Ad)..... 0\ each. sets—Manning, 407; Btrus 400 Earl Lewis. 381, ingjvidual sames — Manning, 196; rown, stfjkes—Taylor, 36; Budiako, 8 Manning, High spares—Brown, 160; Jollile, 157 Strubinger. 147, H 100-36; Brown, E. Lewls, igh averages — Jolliffe, 108, los-11 Manning, 108-27; Bever, 1 'ROCHESTER GAME AHEAD AS SECOND HALF VICTOR NEW YORK, March 18 ().—Rochester, champions of the second half campaign of the American Pro Basket Ball ' | Louisville, outpointed Jimmy Reed, Co- lumbus, Ohio (10); Charlle Baxter, Co~ lumbus, Ohio, knocked out Cannonball Eiler, Fort Wayne, Ind. (2). OMAHA, Nebr.—Billy Wallace, Cleve- land, and Eddi¢ Anderson, Rock Island, T, drew (10). BT.” PAUL—Gorilla Johes, Akron ! Ohio, outpointed Jock Malone, St. 2aul (10). | BALTIMORE.—Joe Glick, Brooklyn, | N. Y., outpointed Buster Brown, Baiti- | more (10). | DES MOINES.—My Sullivah, St | Paul, outpointed Al Van Ryan, St. | Paul (10); George Manolian, Boston, outpointed Joey Foreman, Chicago (10). MEMPH1S, Tenn—Danny Delmont Chicago, knocked out Joe (Kid) Peck. Little Rock, Ark. (1). NEW ORLEANS.—Eddie (Kid) Woite, Memphis, outpointed Ray Kiser, Okia- homa City (12). BIRMINGHAM, Ala. - Tony Leto, Tampa, Fla., outpointed Harry TForbes Chicago (10). CHAMPION CUEIST WINS. FRENCH LICK, Ind., March 18 (#). —Max_Shimon of Milwaukee, defend- | ing title holder, was among four win- ners in the opening games of the na- tional amateur three-cushion billiard kmshulr tournament here yester- day. The others were Frank I Flem- ign, i1, l(toflmr cham- ing of Cham m' :a‘t.m 5 Toledt;\wuo New Oslum ot ‘B Francisco, "picifc cham- League, finished the season with a full | game lead over the Cleveland Rosen- | blums, first half title holders. | The final standing: | Rochester veiand | Chicago H E;’wk s e Wa aterson § AF}n;»fl:": of the =N 37th Spring Y Showing of im- @ yne | ported and do- fabries ... now ready for your inspection. Established 1803 SUIT or TOPCOAT TAILORED TO ORDER. $2750 to %60 Mertz & Mertz 405 11th St. NW, H. J, Froehlich, M, |G. W. U’S TANK TEAM ' BEATEN BY HOPKINS OHNS HOPKINS swimmers today are back in Baltimore with a 32-26 victory over George Wash- ington, gained in lively comp tition last night in the Ambassador pool here the meet by inches, having thus been beaten in the relay the first event on {the program. Had George Washington captured the relay it would have won the meet as it took four of the six re- { maining events. The summaries: 200-vard _telsy—Won (Hanhart. Gordon. Edmund and Prey) TUh-varg | backstroke-Won by - Reeder ( Second, Goldbers (G. W.); thire, ) ard_ breast stroke -Won by Edmon- W ‘second, Frey (4. H)i third, G dash ~Won by Longfellow (G by Johng Hopkine 50-yard W.): second, Frey (J. H.): third, English nhart ( J i00-yard_dash 3 third, Won by second. " Bamund . H “0-yard dash—Woen by Polkinsorn (G Wi, second. Hanhart (J.'H.); third, Cook Diving—Won by Lrman (G. W.): second, Strauss (G. W.): third, Meyers (J. H.). Ha, J M) Vi Enslish 'YOUTHFUL BOWLERS By the Associated Press. CLEVELAND, Ohio, March 18— Johnny Dluzosz, 17, of South Bend, | Ind., gained second place in the all- events and third place in the singles at the American Bowling Congress tour- | nament last night. He hit a 601 in the singles and 1,963 in the all-events. ] Al Gaudreau of Saginaw, Mich., with 1,967. He also shot high enough to gain first place in the two-man event and second in the singles. Gaudreau teamed with Frank Desel- sky of Saginaw for a 1,288, His score in_the singles was, 700. Five-man event—J. W. Thorson, Chi- cago, 2,040; Mandel Lacquer, Chicago, 2,907 Two-man event—A. Gaudreau-F. De- | zelsky, Saginaw, 1,288. B. Bjurstrom- | s. Littow, Chicago, 1,272. Singles event—E. Nelson. Racine, 705. A. Gaudreau, Saginaw, 700. All-events—A. ~ Gaudreau, 1,967. J. Dluzosz, South Bend, 1,963, | | On the Drives Tonight Jeapue—King Pin ve. Hyattaville I _Capil ague—Mount Rainer :Fuc y Strike vs. Pan! District at_Lueky National Caj va, Lucky 8tril sonic _Le HY He e Bver e Ve, Buver, Gampers va. Ba Solomon, Peior fount Bleasant, | % NortheastLe | Prumbers. O | Burkhaiter's | Cons Theater va. 3 Lea pring. Con ister, Bingletop vi. National, Potomae Jerusalem vs. Osirls, ngue_Temple Southpaws, vi. TN WO Ang. xpress vs, Red g, Frin rh Cafe, Artie Bells vs. riheast Temple. | Capitol Hill ue—Navy Yard vs. Ma- hopers Paper Co. at, Capiiol Hill. | uSuburban, Leasie—Rack Creeks ve. Stella etworth. h_of Washington o— Woman's __Improvement e | Wynnewood Fatk, at orth of Wa | Sears Lunch, adies’ Leagul lub _ No. 1 o lair 's Leggue_—Hartford Loy R Columbia _va. Ruth, ph H. Milans vs. Tebanon, | Aeaeia v Gavel R Loty . U, A_M, League—Reno No. 2 vs. E. J.“Ross No. 2, Reno No 1 v&. J. M. Read No. 2, Old Gior: . J. Roas No. 1, J. AT Read No. 1 vs. Liberty Bell, Washipgion vs. | John L. Burnett. Potomac Valley Forge vs. | Benning, at Recreation. Whashington Ladies’ League—Nationals vs. hamrocks vs. Columblans. Billies Service | &t % | Kigg. at Bilyer Spring. Rfia"bin, Businesa M vs_Royal ym, at Yy vs. 8t CwEnaLIon No- 3 Orace Ve Bt Jon arnation No 2, Orace vs. 8t. Jol Grorgetown, No.'1 ve “Reformation. \b Zion, Incarna Jnanr‘lr’n‘:\.# Qrm’fi-f’““ LR { | 'North 'Washington Church Leagye-—Oos { Lumbia| Heighis vs. Wallace Nemorialy Firet | Refgrmed” e 'cenpral Frespyterian.’ emor MCB TV Glinion- Tempie. Betworth Bapiint | VA M E. at King Pin No. 1 hington Church Leagué—Eastern LTtk Bantiht Lincoin Read vi. Second 3 Vs, No: 4"V Brookiang, - Unjte R Nt oo Il ng No. 3. Takoma s 0. 1. 3 1 FRANKLIN 9000 >0 04 <u>mPssn The Colonials literally lost | ARE AMONG LEADERS First place in the all-events went to | Saginaw, | D. C, TUESDAY, BETTS ONE OF FEW TOTURN THE TRICK Rolls 43 Games in K. of C. Tourney Before Hooking Up Three Strikes. BY R. D. THOMAS. HEN Carl Betts of the Knights of Columbus League bowled a perfect score the other night in a three-ball tournament at Con- vention Hall he became one of | probably not more than half a dozen in all the game's history to accomplish this seemingly not difficult feat. | Betts made three eonsecutive strikes firing at tenpins with a duckpin ball It looks simple, but how difficult it | really was may be judged from the fact that Betts, who is rated a first- had failed i in 43 previous attempts. The tournament was held by the Knights of Columbus League to raise money to send two teams to the na- | tional duckpin tournament at Water- | bury, Conn. Persistence Rewarded. | Betts “donated” for game after game until it was becoming a bit painful financially, it costing him two bits a game, but he made up his mind to shoot a perfect score or go broke. A few nights before he had won a& similar tournament at the Rendesvous, also promoted by the Caseys, with a count of 28. 1t was 11:30 pm. when Betts finally clicked three times in a row and his final strike broke up the wun!lnmt‘nt. Betls' rivals had seen many a 29 and | 28 rolled, but few could remember ever | before having seen a 30, and none cared to gamble he could equal it. So Carl | pocketed a prize of $25, which gave him not nearly the satisfaction as the achievement that earned it. | class three-ball performer, About 15 years ago a perfect score was rolled in a tournament at Sher- man’s and six years ago Howard Camp- bell shot one at the Recreation. These, with Betts’, were all that could be re- membered today by several of the sport’s veteran observers. ~The usual Winning score is 28, with every now and then a 20. Campbell won the Odd Fellows' three-ball event at the Lucky Strike this Winter with a 2 The Convention Hall team will stage a ‘three-ball affalr tomorrow night, starting at 6 o'clock, to help defray its expenses at the national tournament and something different in the way of a prize list is presented. For every score of 27 two berries will be paid: each 28 will be worth $3, and a 29 $5. | To show how highly they regard a | score of 30, the hall bowlers offer $20 to anybody who can make one. Another Deceptive Game. Another game that appears easy, but isn't, i& cocked hat, in which only the head pin and Nos, 7 and 10 are used. A perfect score in this is 90, to get which it is necessary to make 12 straight strikes. Either tenpins or duckpii are used, with the duckpin sphere as the weapon. The little sticks will be employed in a cocked hat tournament at Convention | Hall next Saturday night, starting at 7:30 o'clock. The gzirls are invited to take part in this. They will pay an entry fee of $1, plus cost of games. and will shoot three strings. The males will be taxed $2 a head, plus cost of games, and will roll five. The prizes will be |50, 25, 15 and 10 per cent of the total entry money. Some of those bowlers who believe themselves particularly skilled when the head pin is the target might be distllusioned by a game of cocked hat According to Earle Stocking, Convention Hall manager, most bowlers miss the key stick more times than they count. Cocked hat, incidentally is excellent practice for single-pin shooting. Howard Campbell and Ray Von | Dreele will finish their series Thursday night in Baltimore, Campbell entering the last five-game block with a 32-pin | lead, picked up at the Lucky Strike last week. A recent match between the Conven- | tion Hall girls and the Baltimore Re- gents in Baltimore was one of thg, sea- | son's closest, the Washington maids MARCH 18, 1930. . SPORTS. winning by 16 pins. They lost the first game by 6, won the second by 10 and the third by 12. Thelma Clark, shoot- ing anchor for the Hall, bolstered the slim advantage by striking in the last frame and counting heavily. The first elimination round in the newspaper men's tournament at the King Pin No. 2 will be rolled this after- | {noon and tonight. 5 | oo | Entries for the Eastern Star's tourna- | ment at the Lucky Strike will close to- | night. Secretary Maude Ycumans has been plugging energetically to make 1t | a whopper. ‘The District National Bank team, first | to enter the city tournament this year, won the class E championship in the last, in which it was also the first in| line. Perce Wolfe, entered from Bladens- | burg but well known about Washington | as a pin shooter, rolled 1,127 in the all- events of the national tournament and looks good to figure in the cash. The Dixie Pigs shot 1,672: the Hyatts- | ville Arcades, 1,637, and the Chlllum] Club, 1527. | _ 'The Foreign and Domestic Commerce | | League will hold a sweepstakes for! members with averages under 97| | Twenty have entered, with the first set |to be rolled Thursday at the Northeast | Temple and the second on the foilowing | | Thursday A AU CHAMPIONS DEFENDING TITLES Nine and Hlinois Team Will Strive to Keep Honors in Meet Tonight. By the Associated Press. ! EW YORK, March 18.—Nine mdividual champions will de- fend their titles at the Na- | | tional A. A. U. tilts in Madison | Square Garden tonight. While the Illinois A. C. is seeking to retain the team title it won from the New York A. C. in 1929, these indi- vidual title holders will see what they | can do about retaining their champion- ships for another year: 1,000 yards, Ray Conger, Illinois A. | C.; 600 yards, Phil Edwards, Hamilton | Olympic Club; 300 yards, Charlie Engle, | vale; 70-yard high hurdles, Monty | Wells, Boston A. A.; pole vault, Fred | Sturdy, Los Angeles A. C.; running high | jump, Charles Major, Brooklyn Har- | riers; standing high jump, Harold Os- | born, Illinois A. C.; standing broad | jump, ~Willlam ~Werner, Greenwood Track Club, New York, and_16-pound shotput, Herbert Schwarze, Illinois A. |e. | “'Conger's defense of his 1,000-yards crown looms as the high spot of the meet, for he again will be pitted against | Dr. Paul Martin, Swiss ace, who has | | beaten Conger at the distance once this | season. - Others in_ the fleld will be | | Harold White and Bob Orlovich of the Tilinols A. C.. Johnny Wexman, former | University of Chicago runner, and Frank Norbell, schoolboy star from | Philadelphia. i Wells has a formidable field to con- | quer in the hurdles, his Tivals including Sol Furth of New York University, I. C. A. A A. A. indoor title holders, and Lee Sentman, University of Illincis star who bettered the world record in the 75-yard | high hurdles at the Illinois relays last Saturd - A. A. U. TITLE SWIMMING | 'MEET HERE APRIL 28-29 | A District A. A. U. championship | swimming meéet will be held April 28 | and 29 at the Ambassador Hotel, it | was decided at a meeting of the board of managers of the District assoclation held last night at Tech High. Dates and . plans for the District | championship boxing tournament, to be neld beginning March 25, were approved by the board. Plans were discussed for | a track and field meet to be held late in May. According to the dope, the national 15-mile championship will be | held in conjunction with the meet. | | Militaty Academy, Maryland Has Good Outlook in Spring Sports : Bowler Has Perfect 3-Ball Score INTO BASE BALL Devitt Ball Team, With Bright Outlook, Has a Hard Schedule ONZAGA, which will not be met in foot ball next Fall by Devitt, because of inability of the schools to reach an agree- ment, also is not on the Devitt dlamond schedule, nor is St. John's, the Devitt card, which was announced today in virtually completed form, reveals. All the public high school teams here except Tech have been listed. George- town Prep to be met twice, Georgetown freshmen, Catholic University fresh- men, Alexandria High and Charlotte | Hall and Leonard Hall, each of whom will be faced twice, are among other opponents listed. Devitt plans to open its campaign away with an Easter trip in Virginia, during which it will meet Staunton Augusta Military Academy, Willlam and Mary freshmen, Fisburne Military Academy, Washing- | ton and Lee freshmen and V. M. I freshmen. The dates, however, for the jaunt have not yet been settled. With a better squad, both from the standpoint of quantity and quality avail- able, Devitt is looking to more success on the diamond this season than it en. joyed a campaign ago. The pitching department is the most uncertain. If sufficient strength in this respect can be developed Devitt should do well. Raymond Terry of the faculty is again coaching the diamonders. Bernard Bralove is captain and first baseman of the squad, which is now down to serious preparation for the campaign. Here are the Devitt dates so far settled: April 2—Georgetown Prep at Gar- rett Park. April 8—Charlotte Hall. April 22—Alexandria High, Aptil 25—Business, April 29—Leonard Hall. April 30—Georgetown Georgetown Prep. Prep at May 6—Georgetown Freshmen at| Georgetown. May 7—Charlotte Hall at Charlotte | 13—Catholic University Fresh- C. U May 19—Central at Central. May 22—Western. May 27—Eastern at Eastern. 5 May 29—Leonard Hall at Leonard- own. School officials now are considering | a schedule for the public high basket ball champlonship series next Winter, which calls for the playing of single games twice a week rather than two double-headers a week. was drawn up by Dr. G, Harris White, athletic director of the high schools. According to the schedule drafted | by Dr. White, there would be two rounds of single games starting De- | cember 16 with contests on Tuesdays and Fridays until March 4. Thus the series would last twice as long as in | recent years. way in Ji ary, It has been getting under nuary and ending in Febru- running a_little more than a month. Under the new {)lln all games would start at 3:45 o'clock. None would be played during the Christmas holi- days from December 22 until January 2, inclusive. As the result of the new closing hour of 3 o'clock put in effect in the schools last year for thé first time, necessi- tating delay of start of play until 3:45 o'clock, the double-headers lasted gen- erally until around 7 o'clock. This brought objection from parents whose children missed their suppers to see | :ge games or gllmz home 8o tired out ey were unable to give proper - tion to their school h.ome\gorg. o Western High base ball candidates, 40 of them, got outside yesterday for the first time. _Capt. Bob FRE) OF Radintors tor a1 e WIFSTATES RABIATOR, FENDEY AND BODY WORKS. 50T noors Mfeemm"a Bt I TROUSERS To Match Your Odd Coats 19 130 800 141 EISEMAN’S, 7th & F, The schedule | §;.F Quincy Owens, Charley Albert and Jimmy Thompson are among seasoned players at hand. Business will not play its first base ball game until April 17, according to a partial schedule announced yester- day by Manager Sammy Cohen. The late start, is compared with public high and other scholastic nines hereabout, is because Coach Lynn Woodworth is occupied with intramural sports. Here is the Stenog list as it now stands: April _17—Maryland Freshmen at College Park. April 23—Emerson. April 25—Devitt, May 2—Central. May 6—Episcopal at Alexandria. May 9-—Western. | May 12—Woodward. May 14—Gonzaga. | May 16—Tech. May 19—Swavely. May 20—Georgetown Freshmen. May 23—Eastern. May 26—Swavely at Manassas. May 28—Emerson. May 31—Greenbrier Military Academy at Lewisburg, W. Va. Games are pending with Staunton Military Academy, Masanutten Military Academy, Tome, Charlotte Hall and Catholic University Freshmen. Central and Business base ball squads have Iost valuable players through | seholastic ineligibility. The marks have just been announced. Those lost are Capt. George Brandt, third baseman of Central, and Bobbie Lucas, clever little Business inflelder. It is the first time in the careers of either of these stellar athletes that they have fallen by the wayside because of scholastic difficulties. T. Loehl O'Brien, Central High School graduate of last June and at present a member of the freshman boxing team at Pennsylvania, scored a technical knockout over his opponent in the third round during a meet between the fresh- man teams of Penn and Yale, held at New Haven last Saturday. Yale won, five to two. This was the final match scheduled for the Penn frosh and the third in which O'Brien participated. He won the first by forfeit, but lost the second on a decision. Through a series of eliminations several weeks ago O'Brien gained a place on the lower class team and secured his class numerals. TRASURY NEAR TITLE IN FEDERAL PIN LEAGUE Treasury g. P. O. e TefIBE= y_Post Office : Merchant Fleet Corp Interstate C. C........ P. O. Collectors Treasury No. 2 gricuiture .. Cy Jiremen Pub. ‘Bldas. & P. Parks.. ureau of Investigation. eterans’ Bureau... Rec: am games—Treasury, 641; , 5 sam sury, Navy, G. P. 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