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THE. SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTO E—*'fi_——‘'-—_-—————’——--——-—---————————————-—_——-—____————_—*_——____= Capital Netmen Retain Hotchkiss Cup : Sensational Mile Feat Is Barely Noticed \ Grid Menters to Reply To the Carnegie Report By the Assoctated Press. Foot ball coaches, irked by the Camegle Foundation's famous bul- lein 23 of last Fall, are preparing & broadside of their own in reply. Questionnaires have been submit- ted to coaches at 17 leading uni- versities. A report probably will be made public this Fall. W. A. Alexander, president of American Foot Ball Coaches' Asso- ciation, is in charge. ANNAPOLIS LEADS IN SUMMER SPORT Academy Has Full Program Outlined for Half of Mid- dies Who Remain. ( s probably will be greater activity | in athletics at the Naval Acad- | emy than at any other collegiate in- stitution in the country. Members of the second class remain | at the academy for the Summer and the new fourth class rapidly is forming, so that in a short time a full half of the student body will be here and a NNAPOLIS, Md., June 21.—Dur- | ing the present Summer there ' number of sports will be in full swing. The practice of keeping the second class at Annapolis for the Summer, which has recently started, is having good effect upon the athletics of the | f IN'DECIDING CLASH | XHIBITING Vgenernl superi-J‘ win the annual Hotchkiss Cup | the Old Dominion were outclassed It was the third straight Hotchkiss six victorles for Baltimore, since it was The Hotchkiss Cup play is the chief | biggest single factor in the determining m-hlh -Norfolk eliminated Rich- | mond vesterday Washington swept through to tion by Sidney M. Hughes, | institution. mflh t0 land the encounter, 2—8, | candidates for the team will do light DISTRICT NETMEN CLEAN UP IN HOTCHKISS CUP MATCHES CANOEINGCONTESTS TOBEARLDTOAY Yoeman, Dooley Mitchell, Bob Considine, Clarence Charest and Tom Mangan, jr. | THE SPORTLIGHT | BY GRANTLAND RICE. Foul Legislation. N THE midst of the Sharkey-Schmel- |a erippled cast playing on the road. But the cast wasn't as crippled as it | l —— | Poughkeepsie. ~—The four outstanding favor- 26 covered the course here today, anl saw California, Columbia and Wash- | | favorite and agreed that it was any- | | No times were announced for any of sity required “30 minutes” to travel | believed. However, he did say that the | eight by a length at the finish. ~|on the shore at 7:27 for « mile and a | |time row and Coach Rich Glendon It was learned today that Cornell's | time was made in the impromptu race |Observers Unable to Select| Favorite After Tests at 1 1 By the Associated Press. ‘ | OUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y., June 21.| | ites in the varsity race of the intercollegiate regatta on June | |except the Navy, in self-admitted | | trials. At the conclusion of & day that ington going at racing speed, observers | along the banks were unable to pick a | body’s race, with Cornell and Syracuse | shaping up as dark horses. |the trials, although Coach “Ky" | | Ebright of California insisted his var- the 4 miles. He said it with a laugh and apparently did not expect it to be freshmen, picking up the varsity at | the 2-mile mark, was trailing the senior | ‘ Cornell Time Fast. | Washington was clocked by watches half under the bridge and out of sight. | | 'Columbia called it a day after the | sent his oarsmen to the movies in this city in the afternoon varsity negotiated three miles the other night in less than 15 mimutes. The when the varsity defeated the junior varsity by seven lengths. Player Going Nowhere “Must Be a Yale Back” It is a philosophical young man who can laugh at himself, as Mal- colm Stevens, the Yale coach, did. He told of the return of the Yal team last Fall from Athens, ' where the Elis had taken a beating. Returning North the lights in the train went out somewhere in South Carolina. A Southern foot ball fan, & bit.the worse for wear, stumbled into the Yale car and accosted & Yale lineman. *“You goin' North?" he asked, *No," replied the Yale man. “Goin' East?" “No." “Where are you goin’, then?" “I don't know. Nowhere, I guess.” “Nowhere, eh! By golly you must | belong to the Yale backfield.” | NTO REMAIN | N WILSO AT GEORGE MASO ALEXANDRIA, Va. June 21.—J. F.| (“Prex") Wilson has been reappointed | director of athletics at George Mason | High School for the 1930-31 term. | ‘Wilson is a former all-around athlete | of Willigm and Mary College and serves | here in the off season as director of public recreation with supervision over the public playgrounds, tennis courts and swimming pools. | Wilson's retention was announced to the George Mason student body yester- | day at an_athletic assembly during | which 33 athletes received monograms. | Walter Mahoney was the only athlete | | awarded three letters The awards were made as follows: — Capt. Lester Scott. Claude | n. Richard Voss. Maitland Glasscock. | Petersilia. Charles Schaffer. Wil 1ton _ Ror Charles 8 n. Regi- 1 Vincent Curtiss. John 5. Jack Hudson -and Curtiss, _James ‘Tit- e Redman. James’ Fritter, Wal- fer Mahoney. Richard Starke. Richard Var- ney. Jack Hudson, Milton Routzahn. man- S aek— Robert McCaulay. Charles Bettis. Richard Cassidy, Oscar Weiner, Waiter te. — Vincent OREGON BOY SETS AMERGAN RECOR |Hill, a 145-Pounder, Travels Distance on an Qutdoor Track in 4:12 2.5, BY ALAN GOULD, Associated Press Sports Editor. HILE all the shouting has been going on over the sprinting feats of our undergraduates — and been very good, indeed— t! fact is nevertheless that a slim, wiry lad from the Oregon ranch country has turned in the most sensational running per- formance of the year—1 mile in 4 minutes 12 2-5 seconds, the fast- est any American has ever run the distance outdoors and the fastest cinder-path mile ever reg- istered on the North American continent. The youth responsible for this astounding performance is Ralph Hill, 21-year-old, 145-pound junior at the University of Oregon and a_product of the coaching of foxy old Bill Hay- ar they have Little or no ballyhoo accompanied Hill's record-smashing achievement on May 17, which not only displaced the intercoliegiate record of 4:1425 made by Cornell's John Paul Jones at Cam- bridge in 1913, but also eclipsed the | American outdoor record of 4:123f | made by Norman Taber of Brown in 8 | placed race in 1915 at Cambridge. The | marks of both Jones and Taber were | world records at the time they were | made, though subsequently displaced | by Paavo Nurmi's 4:10%5 in 1923 at | Stockholm. Take All Nine Matches, With| ority, Washington's team | tennis matches yesterday on the| by a wide margin, the District conquest. for Washington. The D. C. put in competition by E. D. Hotchkiss, event, bringing together leading rack- | of sectional rankin, in keen battling, 5 to 4. i straight.set wins. In the extra-set dou- 6—4. | work during the hot period, which will Wi | Loss of a Lone Set, for | Third Win in Row. ! E cleaned up with the Nor- folk combination, 9 to 0, to| Columbia Country Club court From the outset the net men from | racketers friumphing in every match save one in straight sets. representatives now have won the sup. | & perpetual award, four times against ir, of Richmond. in 1921. Norfolk and Richmond have yet to achieve a victory. eters in ihe Middle Atlantic section, and the showings in the affair are the Whaligton reacked fine) round play a 6—2 victory Priday over Bal- Has Easy Sailing. i Until the final doubles engagement | Yeomans and Maurice | O'Neill of Washington were furnished | ., and Gilbert Corvington before com- | In other sports, such as foot ball. the ashington found the going against | give them a good start when the regular Norfolk considerably easier than | season begins. ’ 'URPRISING though it was from every angle, there was not the slightest fluke about Hill's performance, looked to be, and it Blair at second | Mo line was btained on Syracuse's | Mehonay. [ and English at third keep traveling At | yime row of yesterday. Cosen. Jim | | the same pace, the Cubs will be hard Ten Eyck would merely say that the ing foul chatter Johnson and Latzo | hand out another dish of the same, 100 Entrants Will Compe(e‘l Jpunst. Beliiiore Priday. New Men Looked Over. sidine, Washington No. 1, who- con- ’ trived to win over Billy Jacobs of Bal- timore only through a great last-ditch rally, coasted to an easy victory over R. | R. Jones, captain of the Norfolk team. | The scores were 6—0, 6—2. Considine | was the master of the situation all the | way. His clever placements resulted in Jones netting the ball time and again. Dooly Mitchell won handily yesterday as he did in the Baltim matches. while Tom Mangan, who furnished stuboorn battling Friday by John Ma- \ gee, was an easy victor yesterday. Bob Con- | | | Academy is an advantage that no other The ogpoflumtx for looking over thei new students which exists at the Naval collegiate institution, excepting the Mil- itary Academy, has. As part of the regular system of | physical training, all the new midshtp- men are compelied to take part for a | certain period in all the usual sports and this affords an unequaled oppor- tunity for the coaches to find material. The new midshipmen also have the advantage of being able to start pra tice for the Fall sports—foot ball, soccer and cross-country—earlier than the stu- dents of other institutions. This will be the most active Summer in sports that the Naval Academy has ever had, as, in addition ‘to the regular | athletics in course, schedules in several | lines have been arranged for the teams | of both the second and fourth classes. Activity in 5 Sports. ‘The sports in which there will be ular matches this Summer are base ball, tennis, soccer, field and track, swlmm&n, and water polo, the schedules | re Charest Comes Back. Comdr. Gill and Edgar Yeomans in took their matches yesterday thout much difficulty. over W. L. La v, 18, L | 1t appears that Charest, who has little | time for tennis so far this season, will | Be back at about the top of his game | with a few more matches under his beit. | Though given spirited c tion Comdr. Gill and Arthur Hellen ‘lt‘ld | Lot r R Considine Mitchell were not greatly 0 one in some others, e but giving the players a certain amount | doul of experience in actual matches. The members of the new classes at | the Naval Academy have a thorough "course of physical training during the | Summer, special features of which are | the infantry and boat drills, and they | also are given instruction and participa- | tion in nearly every line of sport. ‘The new class is divided into smali | which are turned over alter- atively to the physical tramers, who 150 coaches for the different sport, are instructed and allowed to par- | ite in all of them. us, at the end of the Summer, the | new midshipmen are in splendid | phiysical condition, as a rule, and have gained a practical knowledge of many | | sports, while the officials have been able | Mo cull material for the different squads. | |" The system of physical training and | athletics at the Naval Academy has been leullly perfected, until it secures the | mefits of physical training and par- | ticipation in athletic contests of some | kind for every midshipman. | to turn back their Noffolk rivais | . ‘Yeomans and O'Neill, after | the first set to Hughes and | n, 2—8, got going and won the Bext two encounters, 6—4, 6—1. Summaries: WASHINGTON, 9 NORFOLK. 0. “Considine-Mitchell d v -Jones. 8—8. 6 Helien dei EDGEWO0OD LEADING IN TENNIS LEAGUE Edgewood netmen are setting the pace in the Capital City Tennis League $6,000 TROPHY IS PRIZE IN INDIANAPOLIS EVENT | tches are carded to- | | ‘Do Moiay will face Commerce and | __MERIDEN, Conn. June 21 (P —A | pino Club will tackle Eégewood at $6.000 golf trophy of gold and siiver, | and Burroughs will have it out ‘l:?fld'dm'b"'hmd“;nflm‘g;‘dme::- in tlhu | iremon| t match | elty, w P nesday to In- :!“:' :':ehloek L Tepewe | dianapolis, where it will serve as a prize " Team Standing /in the annual eompetition between the | | Indianapolis Athletic Club and the Co- | lumbia Club of that city. The hy, 81 feet high, is sur- | | mounted the figure of a golfer. | 413 | Sixty ounces of 14-karet gold and 550 | 394 ounces of sterling silver were used in the frophy. < STREWGER, FAWSETT | WIN GUN TROPHIES Strewger and Fawsett. with a com- bined score of 82, won the mixed-target contest trophies yesterday in the weekly trapshoot of the Washington Gun Club at the Benning traps. They were two targets better than the Messick-Parsons combination, which scored 80 In the Singer trophy events, Briit, shooting from 19 yards, annexed the first leg with 25 straight. Mareey from 20 yards and Fawsett from 19 each reg- cated Staubly. | istered 24 to win a leg apiece in the sec- % defeated |Ond event. Shelton gained a leg on the (L) ge; | Lane trophy. winning from 24 yards ve (M) | over a field of 14. s e aer & 4 % % Opuie (M) | Tirne opening zone shoot of the seasom | N’fllw—wm and Deck (H) defeated | will be staged over the Benning traps | Tdge. 63 Bendel And | next Saturday i 1 Yesterday's scores championship race with 25 wins against 11 defeats. pCll!rflnent stands second with 21 victories and 10 setbacks. | ct 194 BURROUGHS AND HENRY IN NET LOOP MATCHE ‘Montrose downed Burroughs, 5 to 3, and Henry was a 5-to-4 victor over | Monument in Public Parks Tennis | League matches yesterday. | Summaries %, Qurroushe, 3 LES—Buchanan (M ) defeated Yeat. ; 63 Latena (M) deteated Bianch s 1, 7 64 62 nd Yeomans @) and Krsuse. 6. 1- McDonnell (M) ated York. 75, 6—4 defeated Staubly. i H) defeated S 63 Wallenstein and Garnett (M nd Bperry, 61, 6-1. #1311 defeated Shepard THREE MEET RECORDS BROKEN BY BERLINGER PHILADELPHIA June 21" (®) Barney Berlinger of the University of Pennsylvania_broke three meet records | 1222 Wil today as the Meadowbrook Club romped | Fawsets, away with first honors at the annual | Stine, 31 Middle Atlantic track and field cham pionships with a team score of - 58 points. University of Pennsylvania was second. with 34 points. Berlinger tossed the shot 46 feet 1013 | inches, beating his former mark of 45 | feet 113 inches last year: pole vaulted | , 13 feet, beating his former mark of | /12 feet 4% inches, and cleared 6 feet | 173 inches in the high jump, to beat his own mark of 6 feet 1': inches. WYKOFF WILL COMPETE IN PAIR OF BIG MEETS| 3, e e Once more Stewart B. Iglehart, ace e eeints barins |of the old Aiken team, hoider of the second | e ending actor Tor Faie. ia | WA ing factor for le. 1 BT e Wil compete” bty | beating the West Point Cadets Tuesday [ A O meet ut Pittsburg’ | Isiehart tallied six goals. Today he | N oa A emationa] meet i Omicays | COTalled three. ~ In 'addition to fhis next but_will not run against t young player. Capt. Seott, James Percy Williams Olympic champion. at | -, (UG A0 Josenly ©, Rathvorne son- A buted ‘to_one o most_decistve Vasodisl. WViEh Oclubia. wins the intercollegiate final has ever PASS BALL THROUGH TIRE. |™“Princeton looked better than the score_would indicate. but the Orange I s O e it ne ot |ANd Black was defensively weak in ita ball, z Coach Bible of Nebraska sus- |3COTINg sone. pended an old sutomobile tire and re- Mihe Srel vesey. | Wilgen, 33; | 220 Brown. 0. Par- Messick. 21: Bro s ison. 19 Willtams. 20: Parsons. 16; Fawsett, 17, Mar. 8 1-21 5-20 < 2 Mor, 1.2 ELIS CONQUER TIGERS, 11-0, FOR POLO TITLE RUMSON, N. J., June 21 UP\.—Ylle‘ll polo quartet defeated the Princeton | team today, 11 to 0, and gained its fifth American intercollegiate championship. | Playing before & large crowd at Her- | bert Memorial Pield, Capt. Hardie Scott | led the old El through their decisive Gl O o ‘There are more than 3 Dase ‘bal Seams in Tiinois, 0 "TAU om nine games in the case | J | double blades for Medals in 10 Events on Tidal Basin. PPROXIMATELY 100 bladesmen have entered the first annual Potomac River Canoe cham- plonships, to be held this aft- ernoon at 3 o'clock on the Tidal Basin, Four clubs, Washington Canoce Club, Potomac Boat Club, Old Dominion Boat Club of Alexandria and Sycamore Island Canoe Club, will be represented. Harry and Karl Knight, long promi- nent in canoeing here, are among the entries' of the Washington club, which is favored to win first honors. There will be events for both racing and canvas canoes. The team scoring the most points in each division will be awarded a cup offered by Mrs. Charles Bell, in memory of her husband. ‘Winners and runners-up in each event will get gold and bronze medals, re- spectively. ‘There will be 10 events, all over a half-mile straightaway, six for racing canoes and four for canvas canoes, For racing canoes the events will include one-man single blades, tandem single | blades, fours single blades, one-man nd fours double blades. In the canvas class there will be these tests: One-man single blades, tan- dem single biades and mixed doubles blades. There also will be a tilting con- test and a decorated canoe contest, but these will not count in the point scor- x'x‘ag A canoe safety exhibition will be ven. ENGLISH POLOISTS WIN SIXTH TRIAL CONTEST LONDON, June 21 (#).—The pro- vision English international polo team ing, Capt C. T. 1. Roark and Aldan | Roark, woni the sixth trial match at | the Ranelagh Club. beating the “Best. 8 goals to 4. The “Best” four was com posed of the Marquis of Villabragima J. A. E. Traill, Col. P. K. Wise and Laddie Sanford. WHOM DO YOU LIKE? THE NUSHIES WON just to prove that the boys are going to keep on fouling as long as they feel in the mood. A day or two ago & member of the New York Legis- lature advanced the idea that, in addi- | | tion to foul checks, there should be a | 10 or 20 minute rest period to give the | fouled fighter a chance to recover and | keep on fighting the same night. | In case this rest wasn't sufficient, | then the foul checks could be used a week or more later. There are three arrangements that would cover the sit- uation: 1. Have all fight tickets issued with foul checks. period on the same night, postponement allowed in case the fouled party can't recover in time. 3. Deduct from the fouler's purse enough to pay all additional expenses incurred for the return match, where the foul checks can be used. In the first piace, this deal would practically stop all fouling. In the sec- ond place, it would force a contest in- stead of a farce. So far as the public is concerned, a foul fight is no contest. It isn't worth a dime. It is up to the Legislatures of yarious States to see that some sort of legisiation is passed that will either stop fouling or else stop the fight game. Athletics, Yankees and Senators are now on home grounds within range of | the friendiy odor of home cookirg. The | Cleveland Indians, the other American | League contender, are on the road. ‘The-Cubs are back on Chicago turf in the National, with Giants and 'Dod(rl‘l battling abroad. It will be in- | teresting to see just how this shift | works out in the next two weeks. The Yankees have come with & rush in the | last two weeks, and loud noises from | the bats of Ruth and Gehrig have | sounded & warning to Mack's cham- | | composed of Louis Lacey, Gerald Bald- | pions. Both clubs, playing at home, should improve their percentage figures and become the dominant factors of the | younger league. The Cubs, at home, expect to go after Brooklyn's lead and take a new jump on the Giants. Joe MeCarthy's pennant ~inners have done extremely well with —By Murray INGTON Veksity CRev Conc AT IN 1923, 24 AND' 26, AND WERE SACOND W 22,28 27279 WiLL PE UNMASHE [ AT POUQHKEEPSI1E OW that the.spectators have been guaranteed more of a break at the annual 4-mile varsity eight - oared crew race at Poughkeepsie, everything points to a very thrilling afternoon on June 26, when Columbia defends its rowing title won last year on the dark and stormy Hudson. with so many shells sinking to right and to left that you'd think you e at an oyster bar. It was so dark and so stormy that you couldn't even tell what the radio announcers were saying, let alone the wild waves, b rt on time this s g behind any late comers who' paddle to the atarting mark a half hour behind time with the id “Oh. they’ll wait for me, all right.” (Neote to Jimmy Walker: Don't take up_rowing.) The Sea Lions of old Columbia are at “p"sem, the gems of the ocean (riding the crest of the wave, 80 to speak) by virtue of winni the varsity race in 1927 and '29 an being second in 1928, A right smart record, if you ask me, chief rivals should be Washington and Navy, the former having beaten Cal- ifornia and Wisconsin and the latter having defeated California, M. 1. T, Harvard, Penn and Princeton, among others. Columbia has al- ready beaten Navy, back in April, but the Columbia's coach's father's crew is much improved and may beat their comch's son's erew over the 4-mile route. Sounds ecompli- cated, but it's really simple, for: Dick Glendon, sr., coaches the Navy, while Dick Glenden, jr., Columbia. . Washington has made a remarka- ble record at Poughkeepsie in the last eight years, being first or sec- ond every year but ome, 1928, when they fini third. Navy won in 1921, '22 and 25 and was second in in 1928 and '26. vax is a good hunch to win this 1930 race, but ‘Washington, which beat OCal by only 10 feet, and California, which loét to Navy by less than half potantial to block away from the top. They are | due for better pitching, and wher this | comes, the flag winners of 1929 will be | hard to hold. If Max Schmeling is kept eut of the | ring another year before he fights again, he had better plan to use a tidy part of his surplus cash in life insurance. | 'The difference between the match | and medal play test i golf is wider | than two oceans. At match play Cyril | Tolley carried Bobby Jones to the nine- | boys went “pretty good,” but that they | | had poor conditions. | Substitute Races Wednesday. | Monday will probably see the last of | intensive training and the time rows | | undoubtedly will be ‘concluded at the end of the day. Wisconsin and Navy are the only crews who have not held | publicly announced time rows, but they have both covered the distance. | Arrangements were tentatively com- | pleted “today for the substitute races | | next Wednesday afternoon. Theré will teenth green. In the first round of the | pe & ouraceed rece. 1o & aite ne | | British open at 18 holes Jones led Tolley | tween Navy and California at 3 o'clock | by 14 strokes—almost a stroke a hole. [and an eight-oared race a half hour | later arong Columbia, Syracuse, Penn- | | sylvania, Washington and a combina- {tion Cornell-Wisconsin boat. This race will be rowed over a mile and al alf. In the Cornell-Wisconsin combina- tion boat will be the crew captans of | g Bunker Dread. | The duffer isn't the only ope who looks with dread into the depths of a At Winged Foot last Summer Bobby Jones was within 25 feet of the cup in 2 at the eighth hoie, but he needed seven strokes to hole out. At | | Hoylake, even 4s at the time, Gearge | yon Elm was within 25 feet of the cup in 2, and he needed nine strokes to round out the hole. Here are two of the greatest amateurs who in open mplonships used up 12 strokes from | | bunkers guarding the green before they nell stroki the eight and Goodman | of Wisconsin at No. 3. i Along By Carrol OW that practically all craft | reached the bottom of the cups on two | holes. Extra high tension is one rea. | son, and that s often reason enough. . | R e N hereabouts and elsewhere are | | ottt et o aats that s ks e b sy | can write down in advance of the big effects may-he heard now and | tennis carnival at Wimbledon. One is, then. For example, if you were in Mat- that Henri Cochet should win the sin- | tAWOman or Gunston on the night of 'gles’ champlonship, and that Helen | June 12 and the stars were propitious | Wilis Moody should dominate the wom. | Y0u may have heard something like | en’s contingent. J zm;-" «x:.\eepChmleel olc:-pn :ummu | | The big test may co | “Chung! gt o i - A whether Bit; iy oo B e !xcald:::‘ then the volce of an ' announeer, | {mext best player in the world. This| ;Schmeling swings a left to the schmel- argument is rather complicated. Tiiden | ler” — “Whippoorwill! =~ Whippooywill! | | recently beat Borotra and Cochet beat | Whippoorwilll” “Sharkey lands a right | Tilden. Then Borotra stopped Cochet, which is a feat that has been rarely accomplished in the last few years, | Tilden and Borotha_look {0 be the | two challengers out in front, but neither | has more than an ts nail the younger Frene vy, CHARCe 10 | 1"V hing let us consider & few others wonder is that v | that thus far have remained undecided. | o5 Tilden now 16, Soted wo 'tlrfmfin":;‘:’ | There's the procrastinators' champion- | smashing campaign he has followed for | Ship—let the field be made up of those | 50 many months without getting stale, | €cOnomical souls putting off year after | {1t will be his inability to recover Quickly | YeAF attending to small (and large) jobs | |after a hard match that will eount | about the boat, the purchase of a new | against him at Wimbledon more than | And sadly needed anchor line, for ex- | anything else. In the women's sector, |even Suzanne Lenglen never quite domi: | e eourts as Mrs. T Moody rules | (Copyright. 1930. by North Ameriean Ne Baper Alliance.) to the Horrible Hun's hip.” “Chung!| Chung! ¢ h! (Yes, an owl)." he doctor is examining Schmeling's eye.” “Quack, quack, quack!" and so | forth and on into the night. | And while we are on the champion- | nm_&\k. H en the fabricators' belt could be | awarded to the man claiming the great- | st mileage to the gallon of gas, and the | Pog Bell Trophy to be annually contest- ed for by those chaps who claim to be THE LISTENING POST || BY WALTER TRUMBULL To_say “Hoo! Hoo! is not to win The wisdom of the owi, The donkey in the lion's skin Must bray instead of grow!; A crown alone can’t make a king, When all is said cnd done; T is a great thing to be known as a sportsman, but most any pugilist | would prefer to bs known as a mil- | lionaire. ‘In that case any loss of in- | tereat an m-hp;n of t) pabncudoun'p A fghting’ Reart's the vitai thing | Srousn’ cUgh difference. Max ls smart | 4 gh to know that there are many | That proves @ champion. | enthusiastic fricnds ‘and admirers who EAVYWEIGHT boxers hiave been | DY are with you when you win, dropping like Autumn leaves from | There is a natural aympathy for | | a punch in the stomach or a tap | Sharkey, and yet he rates small sym- on the Rip or leg. Naturally, it is no | Pathy. The fates don't give many per- | Joke to be fouled by a 190-pound op- | SONS a second chance. They gave Jack | ponent. v | three or four and he muffed them all. | Sydney Franklin, a Brooklyn youth | Sharkey has more ability than any man | who has become a matador, was gored | in the ring today, but he fails to make in the groin by a Spanish bull. ~ The | Proper use of it. How can he blame perpetrator of this foul weighed con-|AnY one except himsel{? Even now he siderably over 190 pounds and was fast| Should get one last chance. There is no and vicious. There were no padded | reason why he, too, shouldn't be a gloves on the horns., * | better Aghter next year. Franklin went down, but he got up| But it sometimes seems almost a pity again. Then he killed the bull. | that Sydney Franklin didn't take up | —— | boxing. | N spite of published stories to the ef- tvfl.‘;‘r'tlhl, 193¢ News. | fect that Max Schmeling and Jack | | Sharkey will box again in Septem- ber, the bout is still doubtful. It is true that Schmeling’s claim to the heavyweight title is a bit clouded. He | won it while on the floor. One of the | TO HELP COACH IN FALL | New York boxing commissioners had to stoop and lift Maxs head, while an-| gaeie® mq aay Moret and OClaude Other commissioner fitted him with & | Academy varsity foot ball team of Jast oW g b punder the agreement. | sequon, have received orders to repart T Drefer. to see a champion win his | *t Annapolis in time to assist with the title by anight of fists, rather than by CCAChIRE for the coming season. Both | were_gradunted this month. o, eohmeling is & most atractive | “errorts are being made to secure the If he meets Sharkey again in Sep- | Jetail of other young officers for the tember and beats him. Max would be {00t ball season among them Tom as popular a champion as the game | Hamilton, quarterback of the 1926 team, | ever produced. He would be a' rea|2nd Paul Hoerner, a linesman. hamtn el Eriat oy AR, The athletic officials are particularly BN he weuld oo dumb to take thy | anxious to secure Hamilton, who was & Shanss TG, | great foot ball leader and who assisted ‘Schmeling 13 not an amateur, striv- | With the coaching since graduation. ing for glory. He % a professional, working to secure a prosperous old age. Boxing today is strictly a business. If Max beats Sharkey, he would get a| tremendous and lasting ovation not only as a splendid fighter, but as & great | sportsman. But what If he lost? | As things stand now, Schmeling has & chance to make a lot 6f money in the movies, in vaudeville, in a hundred ways, without the slightest risk. If he had hfi‘.wo‘!hlrlly he ‘lould":en about as mucl a pa attrac as a Smal Tump of sothrecie. in the Penn: | sylvania coal flelds, | He wouldn't even be a . by North American per Alliance.) TWO 1929 NAVY PLAYERS | Sprinter Stays by Work: Says Future Lies There By the Associated Press. % “My work comes before play. my career takes precedence of the track,” says Jimmy Carlton, the Australian champion sprinter, who declined to | represent Australia at the British Empire games in Canada. Cariton, holder of the Alulr‘l‘l: Olympie team are unemployed. “It would be an honor both squads, Hod Shoemaker of Cor- | the Water Front NORTH CAROLINA STATE | for he beat Rufus Kiser, Washington GRID LIST ANNOUNCED RALEIGH, N. C. June 21 (®).— North Carolina State College's 1930 foot ball schedule announced today, lists three new opponents for the wolf pack. Teams not met in the past and on the 1930 schedule are Mississi A and M.; High Point College and Pres- byterjan College. Dr. Ray Sermon, director of athletics, announced that in 1931, State would play the University | of Tennessee in Asheville. The 1930 schedule foll ws: September 20—Hight Point, at Raleigh. Beptember 27—Davidson, at Greensboro. October 4—Florida, Qctober 1 Charlotte. Forest, at Raleigh 25—Mississippi A. and M., 1—Presbyterian. at Asheville. B—North Carolina, at Chapel 15~Duke. at Raleigh 22—8outh Carelina, at Colum- October aleigh. November November i November November in. at R i . Klotzbach - able to run from Quantico Dock into | the channel in a peasoup fog. We might have campaign bars for those whose practice is to go aground frequently— | a different ribbon for each creck, with appropriate clasps, palms, etc., for ex- ceptional cases, and & bronze medal to the season’s high-point man. A champion anchor dragger and chief dock bumper could be installed and a well-shellacked Gordian knot. be given | to the boatiac most proficient at tying “grannies.” And we nearly forgot to mention that a Champ Nuisance Cup | should be awarded, the winner being | sdjudged by the wake of his craft as! he sweeps through the anchorage. | F you contemplate racing this Sum- mer we advise & trip up the Branch s an economy measure. You may our hull coated free with either Navy Yard river lubricant or gas works racing compound or a combination of the two. Guaranteed not to wash off. The odd part of this oil affair is that the gas works accuses the Navy Yard, and vice versa—a Latin phrase, Ossip, that means both are right. 'O more may we rhapsodize or wax | sentimental over the old Flora El- sie, once proud mistress of the bay (there we go again)—for she now is Just_another rotting hulk on the flats off Buazards Point, disfiguring the river, | adding her debris to every tide, some- time to be blown up and removed by the Government. If all old boats and barges were re- moved from the water and burned when their period of usefulness came to an end much useless labor and expense might be saved the Government and our shores saved their litter of decay. As it stands now, they are merely abandoned wherever their last owner sees fit. 'HE new aquarium in Chicago is to be supplied with water hauled all the way from Palm Beach, Fla. Can it possibly be that our Lower Po- tomac is so polluted that it should be| slighted in this way? HE Washington Club's Spring cruise | came off nicely, with a large num- ber of boats making the trip to Mattawoman. Commodore Johnson | managed to overrun some debris in the | river near Jones Point, bending the | rudder on Elvelay and making Guns- | ston with diffieulty, where the damage | was repaired—the versatile eommodore taking the rudder ashore and doing his own blacksmithing on the beach. | Doc Norton and Lyle Pursel had great sport with their sailing dinghies and | auccessfully wet down those bold enough to saill with them. At night the prom- | ised bonfire was built on Deep Point, and all hands enjoyed a baked potato a la sshes, thcn‘h the party broke up early, the crews breaking away for bed about moon-up. AP'N CYRIL SMITH has the Sea Horse out on Ragan's ways for| paint up and overhaul. Our own good Swan occupies the ways with her, and Sam Wiggins' much-improved Effie roosts ashore also. having a new rail and bowsprit fitted. | HIRTY-TWO years ago at Lawley's yard in_ South Boston a cutter named Chenoden took the water. | Thirty-two years of salt and fresh ‘water, of cold and heat, of neglectful | owners and careful owners, raeing, cruising, grounding—aye, even a sink- ing—and the old boat, now our’s, is just about as good as the day built. A bit of repair here and there, and she will robably be good for another 32. The t 18 now named the Swan, though it is soon to be renamed Chenoden (mi ing Sou'West Wind)—when the are again upon her—her masts having been out of her for about 14 years, as nearly as we can ascertain, When she was bullt, they not onl; to build them, but did just that. We cite this example for the benefit of those new to the sport who are likely to look askance at a craft two or three years old—a boat is never r'tlld ancient until the half-century mark is passed. render - good service lon: It is expected that a 67~ -0l will participate in the uda this year, and if so. she will surely good herself. And ace, by a half dozen yards. Of the | race, L. H. Gregory, the Portland Ore- | gonian’s observer, writes: | "It was fast time all the way. . . . ‘They did the first quarter in :59. Kiser was setting the pace and Hill let him. ‘The half was in 2:04, which is ve: | fast, and the three-quarters in 3:09.4. Shortly after the three-quarters Hill started to close up. He finished with & great sprint that literally ran Kiser off | his legs for the latter collapsed at the finish. Time of the final quarter, :63— remarkably fast after such speed early in the race. 'O appreciate Hill's accomplishment it is necessary only to place it against the background of mile running in America. The records show that 4:15 has been beaten only a dozen times, either indoors or out. The indoor record is 4:12, first set by Paavo Nurmi in the Winter of 1925 and equaled by Jole Ray. Here's the list of the fastest American miles: 4:12, Paavo Nurmi, Madison Square Garden, March 7, 1925. 4:12, Joie W. Ray, Madi Garden, March 17, 1925, 4:12'5, Lloyd Hahn, New Madison Square Garden, March, 1927, 4:12%;, Ralph Hill, University of Oregon, at Eugene, May 17, 1930, 4:12%, Norman Taber, Brown University, at Cambridge, July 186, 191 4 Leo Lermond, Boston A. A, at Yankee Stdaium, June 17, 1929. 4:13%;, Lioyd Hahn, Boston A. A, Madison Square Garden, February, 192 4:13%—Paave Nurmi, Madison Square Garden, January. 1925. 4:14%, John Paul Jones, Cornell, at Cambridge, May 31, 1913. 4:14%;, ‘mond, Boston A. A., at Franklin Ffeld, April, 1929, ILL may be the American miler to bring the coveted world's record back to the U. S. A. He has been developed carefully by Hayward, the veteran coach, and has another year of college competition. Up to his’ record race his best time was 4:17%5. He had never before defeated Kiser, who won the national collegiate title in 1928 at Chicago. Last year Kiser was third and Hill fourth in the N. C. A, A. cham- plonship mile, won by W. C. Gets of Alfred in 4:19.4. Hill's brother, Clarence, is a capable two-miler, winning at this distance in 9:34%5 in the meet with Washington. it A $3,500,000 sports coliseum and ath- letic building is proposed in Philadel- hia, Pa. The structure will cover a city block and seat 20,000 spectators. ——e TODAY BASE BALL 23N AMERICAN LEAGUE PARK Washington vs. Chicago TIGKETS ON SALE AT PARK 4 mos., $8.00! Y. M. C. 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