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S " (U HASBADLUC JAIN 2 0F 3 EVENTS %burth From Pole Is Best for 'Hoyas<—Maryland Quartet Gets Good Break. RY H. C. BYRD. PISCOPAL HIGH SCHOOL is the only institution in this immediate section to draw - & pole position in the Uni- Varslty of Pennsylvania relays next week. William and Mary is the other school in the entire South Atlantic region to get the same lucky break. Georgetown has drawn about the worst posi- tions it has ever had, Maryland has second place in its race, while Eastern got a bad break and Tech a good one. In the one-mile college relay cham- pionship event Georgetown will have to from the fifteenth place on the track, which means that, if all the teams take part that are entered, the Blue and Gray first runner will have to fight his way through from the end of a second line of starters. In the half-mile championship Georgetown has the ninth position, while in the two-mile champlonship it must start from fourth place, which is not so bad. t the best break in its fias had in years, having second position from the pole, which on_ the Penn '.ncx is just about as g00d as the pole. In fact, if the first runner is a little better sprinter than the man on the pole the second place is better. Maryland is to run against De Pauw University, which has the pole; ‘William and Mary, Bucknell, Union and Fordham. It would seem that Fordham is the team the Old Liners will have to beat to win. ‘William and Mary has a team entered in the class B college championship one-mile race and has the pole in that event. Howard University is to run in sixth _position against Colgate, Lafay- ette, Springfield, Boston University and Rutgers. ‘Tech, in a class race in which Ever- ette High of Massachusetts has the pole, is to run from the second po- sition. Eastern in the class B one- mile champlonship for high schools has drawn fifth position. Local schools are lemnx ready for the Pennsylvania events. All feel they have & chance in their respective competi- tions. Especially does Georgetown feel that way in the mile championship race, provided its runners get a fair start from a very poor position. Mary- land has an idea that its team has the best chance it has had in three years. e e ag e nd of ¢ competition, but believe their teams are showing well enough to warrant some University of Maryland has two teams in competition this afternoon at College Park. The Old Liners meet Virginia muury Institute at 2 o'clock in a track and field meet and plly Umvmhy of Georgia in lacrosse af o'clock. Both the V. M. I lndoeor'h teams arrived at College Park yester- day afternoon and the latter took a brief workout. And, much to the sur- of the Marylanders, who watched Georxh stickmen, a much better group of lacrosse players were seen than the local school hld any thought would represent ‘the -Athens .institution. It develops the Georgia’s lacrosse players have won all three of the games they have plly!d and in one gave Georgia ‘Tech a beating by something lke ®tol. Vlrlinh Military Institute ath- letes say their track squad is not quite as good as it wulutym thelus of Walker having hurt the team consid- erably. . Yesterday .Maryland's base ball team won from Virginia by 2 to 1 in the best game in which the local team has play- ed this Spring. No score was registered until the sixth inning, when the Marylanders scored both their runs. A walk by Cronin, a scratch hit by Berger, lfldldflvehy Radice got Cronin across the plate, and Berger wem over on an outfield over- throw ‘'to the plate. Radice in attempting to score also ‘was caught between third and home. Cronin, Berger and Radice each got two hits for eryl-nd while Rice was the only V. I. man to tonnect for as_many as t Batson leyllnd nlln pibched fine ball ‘for lowing only five safeties. Lowant. 2 ] ] 8 ......_..........; E = cmoooremm 1 b amusls | uessviigP PO~O00ON~~] csuscansnad Gt iauhs *Batted for Nflhe\l“ in the ninth inning. . 0000060 11 . n 0 004020 0x—2 Bert ¢r Rice. Brrors—Hig- “Two-base hits—Bereer, n Ilt‘.—cvl’ln! Rice. Bacri- Nickolas. Double play—Nick- Left on bll!]l— by Stark, 2. Pas: ‘Umpire—Mr. Sipple. Time of game— 1" R6ur ‘and 40 min Berger, Maryland second baseman, | Gege, yesterday hit one of the longest wallops ever seen at College Park, but got only two bases on it, which caused a lot of amusement among Virginia Polytechnic Institute players and some chagrin on the part of Coach Shipley of Mary- ** Jand, “ It seems that Shipley is responsible ~for a rule that any hit to the left of & D certain object be limited to two bases eon account of the low stone fence back "Jof the outfield and the Baltimore- ‘Washington Boulevard just back of it. No consideration was given to the pos- y2igibility that some one might knock a bspall across the Maryland concrete b d that rises 19 feet high on the side of the boulevard. However, flhuz in the game yesterday Berger | Robl %‘“” up and clouted the ball to the ft of the object, but so far that it went over the boulevard and the con- 1'grete stand and dropped on the foot 1l field, far enough to be a homer ywhere. the Afltl’ the game distance was tepped off and it was about 300 feet | _cifrom . the plate from where the ball 10¢grossed the stand and the sphere was e ted to have been closc to 30 feet “fn alr at the time. . nin was on first at the time with “"only one out, but the next two batters " inning. COLLEGE BASE BALL. #latyland, 2; V. P. I, 1. New York University, 1. 4 " M. I, 6; North Carolina State, 4 ings). fil fasippl A. & M., 2; Tulane, 1. Univenlty of Richmond, 4; Prince- e iibama, 11: Georgia, Tenneasee, 16: Muyvme. 14, ; Columbia, 0. Geomn Tech, 3. 4; Amherst, COLLEGE TENNIS. thmnwn and Lee, 3. !Mton. 4, Cornell, 2. Springfi eld .20 52418| C. & P. Tel and Maryland did not score dur- | PORTS Rochkne Soon to Be 0. K., Mayo Clinic Tells Him NEW YORK, April 19 (CP.A) # Knute Rockne's leg trouble was dun to an infection. Physicians at the Mayo Clinic have already found three foci and thus knowing what is before them they have promised the Notre Dame coach that if he scru- Ppulously follows their instructions he will, by next July or August at the latest, be a completely well man. Knute will remain at Rochester, Minn., under treatment until the first week or so in May, when he will go to his home in South Bend. But there will b no walging. on that leg, or the other leg - P \.u-nstfl‘_‘Summe\;t lu well u‘:n( pring ce now in progress at Notre E‘ne proceeds under the direction of Hunk Anderson and Jack Chevigny and in the last week or two Rockne will polish off the work of the squad from the vantage point of & wheel chair. MARKS N DANGER INKANSAS RELAYS Track Is Fast for Big Card Today—Charles Leading in Decathion Test. By the Associated Press. AWRENCE, Ka April 19.—A clear sky and fast track was ex- pected today to result in estab- lishment of many new records by track and field stars from 29 uni- versities, 41 colleges and pumerous high schools in 15 States, participating in the eighth annual University of Kansas relays. Fourteen relay races and hine special events are cardeg. Participants in the competition in the big bowl in the valley below Mount d included many Big Six school representatives and athletes from all but two of the Big Ten Conference members. ‘Wilson (Buster) Charles of the Has- kell Indian Institute entered the final round of decathlon events today with a lead of 500 points over his nearest opponent. Unless predictions are far afield, he will emerge, early this after- noon, winner of this event. The de- cathlon was the only college event to begin yesterda, A teammate, James Grant, was in second-place Dolltk!n W. A. nayd jr. of Westminster College was in place, and B. Douglas of Ortnneu wn fourth. Tom Churchill of Oklahoma. winner of the 1929 decathlon, was not here to defend his title. Big Ten Teams Favored. While the eight universities of the Big Ten Conference were favored io carry away a large share of the univer- sity events on 'ths strength of last year's performance, the open century ~dash had a decided Te: tinge. The favoi- ites in the event n.ve Cy Leland, flying halfback of Texas Christian University, and Clfude Bracey, Olympic team member from Rice Institute, who will continue a duel begun on Lone Star tracks this Spring. Two other promis- ing contenders are Eddie Tolan, Nefio sprinter from the University of Mic gan, and Jack Ford of Northwestern. ‘The Missouri mile relay team, win- ners in the Texas and Southern Metho- dist relays last month, was posted as a favorite in the mile classic, but faces strong ion In baton passers from Texas, Wisconsin, Iowa and the Univer- sity of Chicago. The meet record is 3 minutes 20 seconds, set by the Iowans in 1926. Northwestern is a strong fa- vome in the 2-mile relay, Marquette the medley, and Indiana in the -mue relay. A battle for supremacy in the shot- put is looked for when Jim Bausch, University of Kansas, and Sam Behr, place once. Both heave the shot above the 50-foot mark consistently. Strong contenders in the 3,000-meter run, the only individual distance jaunt on the program, include R. N. Leas:, University of Iliinols, last year's win- ner; Harold Manning, University of Wichita, the National A. A. U. junior mile champion, and Ray Putnam of Iowa State, Big Six 2-mile champion, PHONE TEAM TAKES COMMERCIAL TITLE RBRENERT 32 Carry Ice Cream 32 Woodward & Lo. 31 Diamond Cab Individual Averages., (15 or More Games.) C. & P. TELEPHONE. 8t SE3RETEEEY 28 1 181 143 144 eecuns! EuEE TS Heffelfin'r | Holbrook Baum . 227358 hitford Wilsos | Cotes Martin 223383 822382 | Pearce .. i | Edmonst'n " 1 127 338 26 TIMES-HERALD. Johnson. . Bohlayer . | Dingler .. Lawrence. Rebholtz. . | Burriss . | Giricn .. Kent | Holmes . Brady ... 78 | Plumpton. 81 113 UNITED STATES | oberman... 77 | Lawrence. 7 Verdi i Hamilton. 58 Kennedy., 41 Bush ... 2 i | 8255 282238 285 THE EVENING [TS OWN PRODUCTS MAY FACE DEVITT Three Members of Champion| ¥ Eleven Likely to Play for Columbia Frosh. VARIETY of emotions may stir the hearts of three sturdy young fellahs now at Devitt School when they trot onto the foot ball fleld next November 15 for a game between Devitt and the Columbia Uni- versity freshmen. Francis Knott, who captained the Devitt eleven to the scholastic cham- pionship of Washington last Fall, and Paul Tangora and Dick Keefe, who aided nobly in the conquest, in all prob- ability will be called upon to struggle against the school they helped .to glorify on the gridiron. The three will enter Columbia next Fall, bent upon further foot ball suc- cess as well as higher education. All three are considered sure-fire freshman gridiron material. ‘Their ability is well known to Lou Little, head coach at Columbia and former boss of sports at Georgetown. The Columbia freshman game is one of three outstanding contests booked for Devitt next Fall. The others will be with the Hun School and Mercersburg Academy. Horace Duffey, former Washington schoolboy, hoped to make his debut as a varsity pitcher for Duke University to- day when the Blue Devils met West Virginia at Durham. Jake Edwards, who starred at Tech, was third in the 300-yard race for fresh. men in the annual handicap meet Penn. Edwards had a 2-yard handicap, but finished behind Carr and Kastler. The winning time was 34.4. Forest Park High of Baltimore was to play Central's ball team today in Wilson Stadium. St. Alban’s varsity and alumni were to clash at St. Albans. Western's tennis team was visiting Tome at Port Deposit, Md. —_— CALIFORNIA WOMEN RULE ON NET TEAM By the Associated Press. BROOKLINE, Mass., April 1¢.—Three California women are members of the American Wightman Cup tennis team which will meet the English women's team at Wimbledon in June. Mrs. Helen Wills Moody of San Fran- cisco, Helen Jacobs of Berkeley, Calif., and Edith Cross of San Francisco make up the trio. Seventeen-year-old Sarah Palfrey of Brookline will be the fourth and Mary Greef of Kansas City, Mo., the fifth member of the team. The choice of Miss Greef was made by the cup committee yesterday after the other four had been previously de- cided upon. The team was announced by Donald M. Hill of the Longwood Cricket Club, chairman of the com- mittee. Miss Jacobs has been playing on the Riviera for several weeks and the for- mer Helen Wills will sall next week to compete in the French championships in May. The other three plan to sail from Boston on May 16. ‘The committee also designed Mianne Palfrey, Sarah’s 19-year-old sister, win- ner of the women’s indoor singles title in January. as an American entrant for the British championships at Wimble- don in June. TELEPHONE LEAGUE FINAL PIN AVERAGES Team Stands Coin Box Wire Chle! Constru anuvnu Dumu Engineer; Gipmen wmm- Division' Office Western Metropolitans Western Branch Ho! Western Nationals Records. High team game—Const: Hih iam s copiruian, o lvidull llmQ—Dlnltll (Equip- High lndlvldu:l set—Wolfe (Coin Box), High strikes—Humphries (Coin Box), M High spares—F. Breen (Equipment), "HIl’!h individual :verne—Duetnm:n, “?t,connd hish individual average—Wolfe, Third hi naTyd hish individual a COIN BOX. Dueterman ... 7| Rehunart -13 year; Only foot 126 137 65 25 115 37 13 56 126 EQUIPMENT. Ballard = WESTERN DIVISION OPFICE. C. Roop 22 129 1 Gunninghs 25 339 133 136 95 | s 92-32 | 170 ‘Sweene Hofmann Hale ... Vannoy Smith Michel Erdman 9 94-22 Colgate University made a net of nearly $16,000 on sports for the past ball paid. \ STAR, WASHI ROD AND STREAM BY PERRY MILLER. n one undersized fish. When the. curiain Tose, Justice. of Peace Frank L. Cady was seated at his desk, Benjamin F. Phebus, who of same warden was right, and the prisoner, nter of Washington, D. C oy uj the court room took his place at the left of the court. Two character witnesses for the defendant, ‘Washington, hairs dlrecv.ly in front of the court. The title of the drama might well b'rem'l'herel Al.n;'tz No Justice, No m:’w“ 5 usual court proceedings were dis- with and Perry Miller addressed the court as a character witness for the prisoner. He told of the great work done by the defendant in conservation measures, his integrity and the general opinion of the fishing fraternity of this city in regard to his acts on and off streams and produced a letter from Glen C. Leach, chief of fish culture of the United States Bureau of Fisheries, praising the defendant, saying that he thought such a man should not be convicted on a technicality because he was sure there was no intent to violate the law. ‘The plot for the drama was written Sunday, April 6, when Don L. Car- penter visited Hunting Creek in quest of trout. His lines in the play as told to the court follow: “I had been fishing all morning and had caught about 25 or 30 trout, which, g undersized, I had returned to the 'll"r On the next strike my fish swal- lowed the hook and was bleeding badly. After T had removed the hook I saw that it was almost dead and instead of returning it to the water tc die I placed it in my creel. Just as I was landing another trout, this one about eight inches, the game warden approached, dressed as an officer of the law, and asked me if I had had any luck. replied that I had caught quite a few, but had returned them to the water with the exception of one, which, on account of swallowing the hook. had died. I reached into my creel and produced the fish, The warden got his measure and the fish, instead of being seven inches in length, was only six and three-quarter inches. The warden then said he was sorry, but that he would have to place me under arrest. I was then driven in his motor cycle side car and brought before you and had the case postponed. Technically I am guilty of violating the law, but not intentionally. I was not asked to show my fish, but did so on my own volition, and, had I not done so, the warden assured me that he would not, have searched my creel, but would have taken my word, To me this would ap- pear conclusively that I had no inten- tion of violating the law.” "The next development in this little play was when Warden Phebus ad- dressed the court. He said: “On the Sunday in question I had observed that not many fish were being caught. When I approached Carpenter d asked him if he had had any luck I was sur- prised to hear him say be had caught 25 or 30, but had returned them to the water. any in his creel, but when he told me he had one and showed it to me I im- mediately saw it was under sized and upon measuring it found it was be- tween 612 and 6% inches in length. He did not say ‘I have an under sized trout which had swallowed the hook and would have died if I had returned it to the water’ If he had I would have asked him to throw it away and 'oulq not have placed him under ar- M this point Dr. Magee asked per- mission to address the court, and said: “I am sure Don Carpenter had no in- tention of violating the law. As a mat- ter of fact I would be just as surprised to hear that Dr. Henry Ward, the presi- dent of the Izaak Walton League of America, had been apprehended for taking an under sized fish as I wns when I learned of this case. May I asl the court what discretion it hll"'" lnfl the court replied, “I am not here to ive justice, but to enforce the statute w. I have no jurisdiction to say whether there was intent to violate the law or not, but as Mr. Carpenter has admitted that he had in his_possession a trout less than legal size, I can only impose a fine of $35 and costs.” And thus the drama ended. HAT the anglers of Washington and particularly this column I did not ask him if he had | want to know is, “What is the deflnl- tion of “justice of the ce.” Is it his duty to enforce the law without any authority to use Mtbn as to the circumstances or the intent omn the part of the accused to violate the law? If so, “justice of the peace” is a mis- nomer and name should be changed, or game wardens should be instructed m use every discretion in making arres In the optmon of this column the lnl:ld!nt of last week was not justice ac- cording to the strict interpretation of the letter of the law. An angler is re- quired to have a license to fish above tidewater in Maryland. Not one in ten hundred id violate this law. When he gets his license at a coast of $5.50 he goes to the streams that have been ly advertised as being the best stocked and he expects to find the majority of fish in said streams to be of legal size and not the majority un- der sized, as is the case in Frederick County trout streams at present. Conservation Commissioner Swep- son Earle of Maryland, when told about a story in this column last week re- garding under-sized trout, said: “I agree absolutely with the story in Rod and Stream last week, that the only solution is to hold the fish until they are of legal size, and I am going to adopt that this Fall when 30,000 trout will be liberated.” HOW about closing the trout streams until next year in Frederick Coun- ty? The many hundreds of trout that e being killed unintentionally by anglers would be saved, and undoubt- edly many anglers would be saved a minimum fine of $25 or a maximum fine of perhaps $100, according to the way the case is presented to the justice of the peace. The writer thinks that in justice to the anglers who have no intention to violate the law, who per- haps do not have a rule to measure each fish caught, that the trout streams, at least in Prederick County, should be closed until next year. Sure- ly the intention of the conservation de- partment of Maryland is to continue to supply the anglers with better and big- ger fish and not to have them catching fish the majority of which have to be returned to the water, many to meet a sure death. GLIIN C. LEACH, chief of the Divi- sion of Fish Culture of the United States Bureau of Fisheries, informs us that after visting the trout streams in Frederick County around the ognln( of the season he wrote A. M. well, superintendent of State hatcheries at Lewiston, Md., advising him of the fact. He also suggested to Le Compte over the phone that the Maryland law be changed and be made to read that anglers should be required to keep all fish caught until they have obtained their bag limit of 10 each day. Leach says this would mean a saving of hun- dreds of trout as he does not think that more than 10 per cent of the fish re- turned to the water will survive han- dunx even if they do not swallow the 00k. Leach also wrote N. R. Buller, fl:h commissioner of Pennsylvania, giv- ing him his views about the catching of under-size trout and roee!ved [ reply stating that he, Buller, was very favor- able to the sug tion and that it would be given serious consideration, EVERY angler in Washington should tune in on Station WOL on Friday, May 2, at 6:45 p.m., at which time Glen C. Leach will go on the air under the auspices of e Washington, D. C., Chapter of the I. W. A. L. Leach will take as his subject “Producing Fish for Fishermen,” during the course of which he will speak on some of the points brought out in this article. Our. Leonardtown correspondent re- ports that 50,000,000 spawning yellow perch sent by the Maryland State Con- servation Commission to Capts. Edmund J. Plowden, sr, of Bushwood and Thomas M. Wise of Upper Potomac, who patrol St. Mary's waters in their police boats, have divided these fish and put them in the fresh waters at the head of Brittons Bay and St. Cath erines Sound, all in St. Mary’s County, where they will furnish excellent sport for the thousands of anglers who in- vade that part of Southern Maryland. The House of Representatives last Wednesday passed the White bill viding a five-year construction and maintenance program for the United States Bureau of Fisherles, carrying an appropriation of $3,335,000. The pro- gram embraces approximately 31 new stations, involving 27 entirely new projects. When completed the Bureau of Fisheries will have 106 stations of ;ll k_I{;-AdA At the present time it has ut 75. | e 97. Western Union Men in Exciting Duckpin Race—Golds Lead Gtrls Aces _. 35 Pive Belis 46 38 Deuces IMPERIALS. G. 8t Sp. . 26 168 16 14 Ave 107-10 Colvin Swindlehurst Wright . ... Kiester Reynolds Thomas Hoffenbers Harville Raftery William Eohen Durham Maloney eamer . | 321 |nxm r. 12 ORANGE. Palmer Msy ... Seufert .. Heller Raba . Tanner ' Reeley Delay . 5 |Dunn | 350 Reds. 1304 ne esFlelshell, 133 Wi individusl sets—Paimer. 347; Fiing. flllh strikes _Fiing. 22: Palmer, 16. individus es—Palimer. eam se individ d Fling, 8. fame-McDufe. 93 |PENNANT RACE IS TIGHT. ‘The fight for first place in the City tion of a point se) teams, with Malling having the advan- :‘: | tage at this time. Mailing split even on Jackson High team game—R¢ } High team set—Rov . High individual av Harville, 111.18. Second high Individual average—Ryder. High strikes—Harville. 50, Wrieht. High S Rarvine, *ao’ ‘SWinalehurst. 179 o lsh individuai sames—Ryder and Lim- ick, 1 High individual set—Rvder. 375, High fiat eamg—Broadhurst, 96, Billhelmer Kernka Anthony Harty .. . Fleishell Mos att Trail the week, winning three of six games, while the Postmasters were inactive, and the latter team gained accordingly. | ! Central is not so far in the rear, and should the leaders lose a set of two, would have an excellent chance for top honors. As Central has to meet both of the leaders before the season closes, in three weeks, t| sets may prove to be the crucial series. Parcel Post, which has two postponed sets to play, and is a strong team, is also still in the run- ning, and in view of this situation the closing weeks of the season should pro- vide some hot competition. Delivery, which is making a belated bid to get as far away as possible from the cellar, has been winning steadily for the past month, and is bowling as well as any team in the league, as indi- y the trimming handed to Mail- lnl dunn( the past week. High individual average—Milby, 1054, Greatest number of spares—Miiby, 179. posmber of _striheg—Vea " Der um . e Webb. it NATIONAL BOWLING RIVALS END SERIES Bethesda Leading Clarendon by 26 Pins—Del Vecchio Arcadia Attraction. I I med with spectators tonight when the Bethesda team, champion of the National Duckpin Bowling Congress, meets the runner-up of that event, the Clarendon Stars, in the final five-game set of & series open- ed at Clarendon. The Betehesdans hold & 26-pin lead. Another sizable gallery is .expected | P at the Arcadia, curious to view the style of Sam Del Vecchio, the youngster who rolled a record game of 240 several weeks ago. Those who haven't seen the 16-year-old Eastern Hizh School stu- dent are interested chiefly in the de- livery that was good for several con- secutive strikes. Sam will oppose Eddie Espey, young member of the Arcadian team, who is a strong favorite to win. While Del Vecchio and Espey are having it out, the regular weekly sweep- stakes for women will be in progress, -|on; with the Monk Fraser Sweep- stakes. ‘Monk is putting up $60 for first place, $30 for second and $10 for third. The entry fee of $3 covers the cost of games and nobody is barred. George hnr. the Baltimorean, has been saying all season he could make it hot for Howard Campbell or any other national star, and last night he proved it by beating the King Pin cap- tain, 624 to 584 in the opening five- game set of a series to be concluded at the Lucky Strike next Friday. In doubles, Bernie Frye and Jack ‘Wolstenholme, Campbell's mates, were beaten by Wesley Askew and Ed Blake- ney, 1,208 to 1,150. Blakeney was high with 619 and Wolstenholme was next with 607. Lang finished with a game of 154. H. W. Allen, Bethesda's 70-year-old bowler, defeated J. C. Joy of Hyattsville, alto a septuagena: , 545 to 482, in a match at Bethesda. In another clash between oldsters, James Lusby of Hyattsville defeated G. A. Broadhurst of Bethesda, 545 to 489. Wally Burton and his dad won the father and son tournament at Henry Hiser's Bethesda establishment with a score of 1,111. The Crawleys of Mount Rainier were second with 1,100 and the ‘Wolstenholmes third with 1,095, The Biers were fourth with 1,093. ENRY HISER'S bowling plant at Bethesda likely will be jam- \ELI TEAM RETAINS TITLE WITH FOILS By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, April 19.— Capturing the foils crown in a close brush with the Army, the swordsmen of Yale re- tained their three-weapon title at the lntercolleflllc Pe'm:lnl Association chlmn\nnlhlrl the three ee!ending titleholders in the cumnt tournament, Columbia in sabers, Navy in folls and Army in epee, only Columbia could reuln its title. Yale de roned the Navy in foils and the Arn in e} ‘The final Iolls .!tlndin[ follows: ‘Team. .Won. Lost. Yale 4 (lost 15 bouts) (lost 18 bouts) (lost 15 bouts) (lost 20 bouts) pro- | Pe: Penh, 1; Harvard, 7; Penn, Comeli. 4; Yale, 5; Navy, 3 1 INDEPENDENT GIRLS’ BOWLING AVERAGES Team Standing. Won Lo t. Peerless lon 20" ’:Cl High team game—Peerl: High Team Set—Peerles: 4. High individusi same - Sumne) High individual set—Weich. 330. High averageogarrett. High strikes—Sumner. 14. High spares—Welch. 57 HiEh fat' sames Shusries Jarre Individual Averages. NATIONALS. . Sp. HG. Jarrett 53 Colburn Sumner Bruen IN MAILMEN’S LEAGUE |gritn | Post Office League is still on between | E H! | Mailing and Postmasters, only a frac- | Mossi parating the two|g egro Finnegan . Matchett Jackson BIRD AWAITS OWNER. ‘Whoever owns a pigeon bearing the | band marked 206557-M-ECCA may re- | gain possession by communicating with William N. Schwenk, 109 Seventh street | southeast, into whose window it flew. RACES TODAY Havre de Grace Philadelphia Handicap $10,000 Added SIX OTHER RACES Special B. & O. train leaves Union fration 12:00 moon. " % Pen W $1.50 !‘" P.M SPORTS. Penn Relay Carnival Results to Go On Air ‘The thirty-sixth annual Univer- sity of Pennsylvania Relay Camnival to be held at Franklin Field, Phila- delphia, Pa., next Friday and Sat- urday will be broadesst for the first time over the Columbia Broadcast- ing System. Ted Husing will begin his word picture of Friday's events at 3 p.m.. Eastern standard time (WABC will join the network at 3:30), and eon- tinue to 5:45, when he will sign off until 2:30 p.m. the next day. Saturday's broadeast will continue for two houss. 160 WILL CGMPETE IN FAIR SEX MEET BOSTON, April 19 (#).—Girl and woman athletes to the number of 160 will compete in the Ifourth annual woman’s national indoor track cham- plonship meet here tonight. !l‘ht titles will be decided, with six of last year’s winners defending their honors. Catherine Donovan of Newark, N. J., holder of two titles, will p:rm!( her 220-yard dash title to go undefend- ed while competing in the hurdles. Stella Walsh, 19-year-old Cleveland dasher, is entered in three events. She will run for the New York Central Railroad A. A. ‘The other defending champions are Mary Carew of Medford, Mass., in the 40-yard dash; Jean Shirley of Phila- delphia, high jump; Katherine Mearls of Boston, standing broad jump; Rena MacDonald of Boston, eight-pound shot- v\lt. and Marietta Ceres of Newark, N. J., champion base ball thrower. English Language Now Is Fouled by Scrapper NEW Y1 , April 19 (CP.A).— In these dWs of prevalent fouling, even Daniel Webster has been hit low. At the last New York State Box- lnl Comml.ulon meeting the many around were mys- l-lfled by the presence of all the ref- erees and jud.es m New York City. “What they them guys here for todny"" uked one boxer. “I hear they is goin’ to have to take a silver service examination,” w‘;s the erudite explanation of an- other. KOSKI S FAVORED 10 WIN MARATHON Bald-Headed Finn Is Choice in a Field of 215 in Boston Race. By the Associated Press. * OSTON, April 19.—The Greek who raced from Marathon to Athens in 490 B. C. to bear the news of victory will have & band of 215 attempting to duplicate his historic run today. A bald-headed Finn, Kare Koski of New York, was favored to win the ‘evmt the thirty-fourth annual Patriots’ Day Marathon, but the field of runners in- cluded Johnny Miles of Hamilton, On- tario, the 41-year-old Clarence Demar of Melrose and five others of the frst 10 finishers last year. Twice Koski has been second, fifth another time and sixth once, but he re- cently won the American championship title at Staten Island. Last year he was beaten by Miles in the last 2 miles in the record time of 2 hours 33 min- utes and 8 4-5 seconds. Miles had won once previously, in 1926, and Demar has taken the run #ix times in the 12 years he has b>>n en- tered. He won in 1927 and 1928 and finished ninth last year. The _course is through hmy country from Hopkinton to the B A, clud house here, a distance of 20 miles J85 yards. A crowd of 300,000, with 10,000 or more at the finish, will see the race. Other favorites appear to be Willie Kyronen of New York, third last year: Jack Lamb of Boston, Billie Taylor of Sydney Mines, N. S.; Gabriel Routsal- ainen of Montreal, Ronald O'Toole ol Si. John's, N. F.. and Max Lamp of New York. Whitey Michelson of the Melrose A. A., who finished fourth last year, wh‘ndrew yesterday because of an injured ’A wlnrfz‘r 13 years ago, old Bill Ken- nedy, the Port Cheflel’, N. Y. brick- layer, will race obt:rv‘ Tor all makes. IA'I‘OI-. FENDER %lhlm I'I‘A'l'l"! %9 131 2909 18 Beginning Tomorrow distinguished men and women will tell you about CHOOSING Y O CAR UR EER OMORROW in The Star will begin a series of daily articles written by twenty-four distinguished men and women. Railroading, radio, music, insur- ance, science and invention, aviation, architecture, medicine, and many other great fields will be discussed for you by ‘great men and women. Read These Interesting Accounts of Careers in he Star Beginning Tomorrow, April 20th The Great N, ¢wp‘p¢rr of the Nation’s . Capital