Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
A6 SPORTS. THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C. WEDNESDAY. JUNE 5 1935 SPORTS Victory, Not Record, Is Jack Lovelock's Main Inlerest in Running Mile Race NOFLATIARK [ BARICS Ao [ (S p By | Lo zsswane arren ) DO VAT ACES NEAR, STAR SAYS ' BARFORLONDON | o g~ KEENABOUTDUEL e zea"ander ls in Good EESE. - | Would Be $180,000 on Purse / e 4 ‘ B S “ Princeton Meet to Decide Cond?tlon for Test on . of $300,000, So Maxes (i /G ' / ] P ) o S Supremacy—Trojan Squad Princeton Track. ; Will Pass It Up. foh i 1 A Vi ? o o I.C.4-A Ml | i I ’ : : M 7 . C. 4-A Marvel. Associated Press Sports Writer ONDON.—Those who know their | Associated Press Sports Editor. RY ORLO ROBERTSON, By the Associated Press. \ 1y = 4 ¥ BY \—rn— D ‘ ’ = ! ALAN GOULD, EW YORK, June 5.—The mile some day may be run in four minutes flat, but you can't get Jack Lovelock, the Brit- ish Empire’'s premier runner at that distance, to even suggest that he or any of the present crop of milers ever will turn the trick British income tax laws are willing to wager almost any given amount that Max Baer and Max Schmeling do not meet for the heavyweight championship in London this Summer. Even if the British home office EW YORK, June 5—The two young men who have explored more athletic stratosphers than any others, Keith Brown of Yale and William Graber of South- ern California, will attempt to settle their spectacular, long-standing ri- Holder of the world record at 4:07.6 grants permission for the match, they i o % k o until Glenn Cunningham lowered the | don't believe Promoter Walter Rothen- iy 3 £ 4 4 valry | burg can make the riffle mark to 4:06.7 last year. Lovelock is B S S 4 - here to meet the Burly Kansan, Bill 3 i b | Here's why: Rothenburg has guar- i i 4 > £ " A \ 1 Bonthron. former Princeton ~ ace: : > : : L K | anteed Baer a little matter of $300,000, . : ) Beth slready had weicomed the bid Gene Venzke of Pennsylvania and L in advence and without income tax . ¢ % ! for post-graduate competi Glen Dawson of Tulsa, Okla.. in the . 5 % £ The British income tax on large sums 3 3 e A 3 \ meet headlined by the Ci “race of the century” at Princeton’s $ |of money earned in & hurry is 12 fnvitation track meet, June 15 ¥ | shillings on the pound, or approxi- i % ¥ s The blond. curly headed former o % : : B8 | mately 60 per cent i i T & \ sods, Bron contbated s dramatic Oxford student. a Rhodes scholar hampmn Mica of Meander, owned by Meander Kennels of Locust | Which means that Rothenburg, after : o W4 \ build-up” for it Saturday at Har- from New Zealand now working on his fine specimen well exemplifies the whippet standard. he got through digging up Baer's - = 3 ' m by clearing the d his M. D. at London U V. is g - ———— | guarantee, would have to find another aovagoub i . LoveLocks 4 i s : : j ot 512 inches $180,000 somewhere to satisfy the CoPoNEnTS . WILL MATCH STRIOES C Vale catlain’s farivell to tne Jooking forward to the clash with HE whippet, otherwise known japorer. . p 2 orer-sportsmen: speed and stamina America’s foremost milers with even as the poor man’s race horse, is e , = Z " British authorities. Not to mention . = e ey o Another Intereating example of |ners T B o tre formey. | Schmeliig's end. o BEATIY g’""BGL‘WCUN”'“S““" gt . Rothenburg might conceivably raise WIS RACE iLL BoNTHRON AND GENE A gl " / ark of 14 f . made in 19 nthron ablish a new wor man's efforts at creation. It ang the terrier. of one kind or an- | ROGEERIEE MBLC CONCINVALE T 4 N i . eptics ENZKE IN THE WVITATION 4 1t also eclipsed by he all-star invitation track meet at Princeton June 15 Lovelock-Bonthron-Venzke mile race, record as first bred in the mill and other, for the latter it e latter. Later, when the stricts of England for cours- gog s us il They think he might even show a : Enjoys Running Now. abbit. hunting dog was used purely for racing. and | proft if that were his total commit- | MILE AT PRINCETON — A GG 20t saose klckloup| Looks were unimporiant, fo these| postant aunearunce S A .| ment, considering that there is much _ v - TWO YEARS AGO,ON of running now than I did a few nen & dash of Italian greyhound | oot money floating afound Lorros, ;:5 iAg_f zRAC; JHE vears ago.” he said. “Maybe it is Oxford trainer, William G. was added. rough-coated dogs were r ainer, 2 2 ! c 02 ogs wer Ak hi 5 because I do not have to work as hard omas. not bred from. those that showed their | YOuld Preak his bac 2 VNT/ rown Long Jinxe would break his ba WORLD'S RECORD UNTIL B) ong Jinxed as I did before I reached the top.” terrier ancestry too clearly were ta- \ For an hour reporters asked him | OVELOCK said he saW no reason pooed and the whippet as we know | then bite a person and give him the 3(‘,, USUALLY CONTERT CUHNMEHAM ERASED to outline his n for matching busting himself running 4:10 j today was evolved disease immediately. Or it may be N7 WITH BEATING HIS MAR, V7 sfrides with Cunningham and Bon- W he could win by five yards in And the whippet, as we know it Picked off and squashed by somebody — “uis TIME THE FORMER-OXFORC 1 on the day Graber scaled un- to tell how he has been ? today. practically s a grevhound in With & cut on his hand. and the picker r—’_‘ TSTAR WILL RACE AGAINST THE WATCH precedented Thereafter the ls or whether he e over here to win, regard- | mintature. Although the color is un- | M3y become infected that way. Neither AS WELL ~ HES GONG ATEL THE RECORD: [up. o lanky Eli s jinxed, until last would_be set. less of e been Working | jmportant, most show whippets are 008S mor people can transmit the e r——— A Satur is att ither 10 to each he answered, grmning: m i on gradually this'fawn color. Their heads are narrow == ST e Southern California rival or Il disease directly. There are some sorts — SRS That's too much of a leading Spr 35es 10" teason why I! wedsecshased. with strong though|Of insect powders which tend to dis- + should not be at m; e suusles. Thelsears ape | courage tieks RIVAL COACH AIDS TECH BURKE BIRD HOME FIRST ;@ 1"\ 3" [0, ™0, .0 I do believe. however. that if one i knee that threatened Sk s Tk = S b 2 1 repose or semi-prick EGISTRATION number one million HODI(‘!‘ Slan(l]ng shi 33. they tied with three others of us sets a new record it will not o retirement after setting x like the collie’s. In bod: c afte ing at atter e the collie’s. v e ermel cln - ey Gets s g MA- assigned to Sheltie Alice e ti AL A et NL to Beat Eastern Faculty course Race of 500 Miles. V hompson, also Y;L‘ al 117, a8 does | wre e ¢ ‘Djj kK. Gown, a blue merle Shetland sheep- By the Associated Press i - m‘m;"_ = ri Mis chest dog bred and owned by Catherine E.| Coach Fd Foxley, Tech. and Jack _Home runs yesterday—Goodman. A bird from the K. C. Burke 10%, Lovelock said 1 as in at New Zealand Univer t s el e R E Ray, who tutors the Central diamond- Reds. 1: Hartnett, Cubs, 1; Jensen, |won the sixth pigeon race of th L : this Spring as good con s he was two 1 g 1d i flat. are 1ot 100 n handing Miss Coleman the fram- ers! showed their charges how it Pirates. 1 RN THCOR Thee o Santa Barbara years ago s joined by speed ition {0 its ed parchment, Russel H. Johnson. Jr.. should be done vesterday when thes The leaders—Johnson, Athletics. 12 BN -Sion. * By b A St . submitted for world o Siatie and)e onate ;,‘N . vzu.;mm of x]h American Kennel teamed as a battery on the Tech fac- Greenberg. Tigers, 11: Foxx, Athletics, Capital Racing Pigeon Concourse from ion because the take- i d “This occassion is espec- ulty nine to defeat Charlie Guyons 10; Ott. Giants, 9: Bonura, White Sox, Cleveland, Tenn, an airline distance as found to be often an efficient watchdog. al 7 ; g ik ! It not only marks Eastern faculty team. 11-8, before 9, Dickey, Yankees, 9. 00 i the point of s ] even for & Z {E deadle tick has started its an. | ® ETeAL milesione in the history of the | 2000 jeering studenis aL Easiern asurement. Al V ROD awp STREAM [ Titins e iHERME s 2 e T e e o AT s et ! 1 neighbor- | byt it also stresses the grand sport ! Foxley { T per minute of the first return to e e s The fi fctim of veorl = f - spo oxley fanned 11 and smacked out V. QESU JERILEL W0 SRcll | mughiy evement and indicates Aq PERRY MILLER DA L0 ol L victm of The Vear and. cameat endeator (hal one Tas four s bingies in e trins o the INJURED TO BROADCAST. loft. the fist seven being diploma Graber slso s a1 the peak for s > 15 Dr. Frank Lorimer of Idylwood, Va find in the breeding and showing of plate, while Ray garnered two hits in Buck Newsom, confined to bed with | ¥Inners forthcoming duel with Brown. The o1 & ke r;r Siotted feves good dogs. Your Sheltieland Kennels four times at bat. Guyon and Artie ken kneecap. and Arthur God- 1.0504%: Co 042 95 5 ) v re for sy € constitute a typical example of v- Bo I it fr 1 his Virgini s A i NGLERS did n 1 d ith one of his old fishing com- is pre ion. The only preventative ik gy Hoyd “led 'the Essiern is@ack with & bly, Virginis Domne s & IRG B o Mays Try 15-Foot Vault. e Dumaine. 'ang what | is to pick the tioks off, Childre thing that is desirable in a sport that brace of hits apiece The game juries received when thrown v i s IS conce ¢ 45 : S They selected the dogs should be lnoked Children and | I consider the greatest leader to hap- marked the ninth annual assault on A horse. will be presented in & :nvas. Lt : 87 CORCRITRY. B 15 SOVOGHIONE 01 o et L s . ki € ey piness in the world.” se ball by the teachers ' broadcas i er WJSV by Arc! Bay and : g nd cow pasture, lo at least once each dav. Special at- ' r idiPoc Sy S L e . Moo The IE e e 1 in : L tention should be paid to the heads (T)BEDIENCE tests are scheduled for Fo i Boy 1 Worse.” will be broadcast from the Jast week end both. Infected ticks the Westchester Kennel Club show Ra 74 i it bedsides fre 5 c el e o itione ©d broOk trout, br L fransmit the Infection to their prog- | on June 8 at M, Kisco, at the Lenox | Heta 0 ; : a0 L L E Pl o na E e e S [iDos L roUt ook so he eny show on August 17. and at the Somer- § Hoa o p have not been rable. However bows ranged from 14 to 16 inct 1 order to develop the disease the set Hills Show at Far Hills, N. J., on K ] 4101 KAMM NOW TRIBE SCOUT. some ‘NWM ted good length. He said the streams were tick has first 1o g on the blood of September 21, =it 1 re.1f { CLEVELAND . 5 P —Willi RENEWS $25.000 RACE Fiit; o sie D of the b miles from a railroad and that some animal for several hours. This Mrs. Whitehouse Walker of Bedford Waitz :b' ) 0¥ P10 0 0 Kamm, ers " thind e ; : eing o Sn igan 2 the Pa& nly one angler was encounte s g e (g e fepepiflcsses il cosunsiong B t ] ”amn} erstwhile third baseman for ~ BALTIMORE. June 5 #).—The Fi- ;.\ML f;.y\tlvbf‘ ween Benedict and ejther stream. Their best : U dr he discase or of some ed in promoting these tests and will ; e b et Al B | S S he soncia ot P ] e e rooms Island d fi g in the Jackson River using pr | T her words. P g fl gL e 4 ! ¢ for 1 Cl ’ Tico race tn T exi N e 5 T e e i " inte a Lmi e xhx:e-n§l?§=“(L.\gfx‘,ffly\‘;zv’;"lflWm AT e B L, become & scout for the Cleveland In- lico race track next November 2, after t "y raight vear that the - i 2 b 2 a6 dians. K a lapse of two vears team v has gone West. sea trout Capt. Harry Wo at Solo- mons Island says catches down I have been nothing to brag akout Ithough fish were landed by mnearly parties W. W Wilkinson reports plenty of i are being caught in t Eusquehanna below Deer Creek, the fich striking from 6 p.m. until down ¢ Wall ey started to bite, he gaid, but are plentiful John F. Dalton at iver. Bel Air. Md.. reports per biting for the past few days. “Should tmprove soon,” he said. Capt. Oscar Haddway at Tilghman 1sland says fishing is good, h hard- head biting and a few blues being caught. A 10-pound rockfish was Janded trolling in that vicinity last week, I Capt. Dewey Webster at Deals Is- fand savs that f g is good. Hard- heads are being caught in large num- bers. One par Down around Cape Charles. Va Capt. Bryan T reports channel bass. hardhead. Kingfish, sea trout biting and blue fishing just rting T OREGON INLET. N. C., north- east winds prevailed for four days 1 week. according to Capt. Way- Jand Baum at Wanchese. He said he expects better fishing when weather gete right. We received word from L. W. Atkinson of Washington, who fished at Oregon Inlet last Saturday and part of Sunday. that he landed only 4 flounders and 13 blues. He #aid anglers have not been catching ] many blues and no channel bass for a week or more | Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Gilliam and their son Billy, accompanied by Mr.; and Mrs. W. E. Edwards, fished Sun- day at Wachapreague, Va. These anglers landed 30 sea trout, the| largest weighing 3% pounds; several | kingfish, three different species ot‘ sharks and many skates. | | James D. Jarman at Ocean City yeports that anglers are arriving by hoat, buss, automobile and airplane. One fishing party landed 115 blues #nd another returned wita 82, weigh- ing from 4 to 6 pounds | | Capt. W. M. Stevenson at Bowers | Beach, Del.. reports “greatest fishing | we have ever witnessed. Boats catch- | ing as high as 12 channel bass. Extra | good fishing for hardhead and sea trout.” ([ mciomac arond Washington is in great shape for the anglers and rockfish, large and small mouth black bass and catfish are furnishing good " ] . e e e eeietey each N‘t{ "V}ft“ will tell you he needs relaxation ‘You won't find Arrow foo sweet; nor foo bitter. weighing 5 pounds, and that his y the time the noon knock-off comes. Too sweet beer is caused by unfermented sugar— brother ~Charlie landed one weigh- That’s why Arrow Beer goes with his sandwich too bitter by improper brewing of hops. Agrrow ® HOW TO ICE AND 1 Tta. . . o st s just like bacon goes with eggs! has a real beer tang brewed in by men who know SERVE ARROW BEER Last Saturday and Sunday we fished i ) In the bay off St. Jeromes Creck Real relaxation comes only from beer that is the old world secrets of beer at its best. Bottled beer should be kept at 45 degrees Fahrenheit. Too low or too Baturday afternoon we selected South- . 5 2 B oA not et w stiiks. right. It has to be brewed right—aged right and As Arrow’s cool amber goodness eases down to high a temperature makes beer flat. ?: our return :; :h;:? r;ran;r;?m;r:g bottled right. And that’s Arrow Beer. Here's why: the spot where only the best drinks go, a warm Chill slowly if possible. Beer chilled . . glow races up. A change creeps over you. You ;fig?g;',’r,b:z':;fl"' NEVER caught a number of big hardheads Arrow Beer is produced the long way —Nature's relax and feel at peace with the world. You get the Using clean, dry cloth, polish all d B d . L e way —without short cuts. Arrow pays a premium ® m&n?fiérdlfirg; mcnogm:r:;ngbh:llr Eob to get the finest hops, the choicest malt and richest real relaxation thatonly comesfrombeer atitsbest. glasses thoroughly. Greasy or s0apy grandsons. also vited St Jeromes y eaISt th:h world has to offer. Arrow pays for So don’t just say beer—say Arrow Beer. Drink e Creek. ey fished late Saturday eve- ity — 1 H < loaming head, pour from center ning close to Point-No-Point Light quality —then brews and ages this quality in. Arrow and relax! of glass. For no head, bury the neck and landed 99 hardhead and 6 sea of the bottle in beer as you pour. trout, the largest trout weighing 3 pounds. Sunday morning we joined parties GLO.‘ 'REWIRYI .AI'T|M°R!' MD. and made another try, but the heavy northeast blow Friday night evidently scattered the fish. Sunday morning only one hardhead was caught. City Postmaster W. M. Mooney went Gout fishing last Friday and Satur- |