Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 July 1941 — Page 6

Our My.

By J. E. O'BRIEN Times Staff Writer

CAPITOL CITY GUN CLUB, July 27 (Delayed by sore shoulder). —The clay pigeon, your correSpondent is ready to acknowledge. is as elusive as the snipe or dodo. So it’s -just as well that Uncle Sam, who knows us merely as Order No. 2072, wasn't represented when we made our acquaintance with skeet here on the Capitol City's synchronized range today. We had listened for some 30 minutes to a description of skeet —heard what a difficult sport

this shooting game is, learned of the approaching national shoot here and of the number of crack marksmen enrolled at Capitol City. But apparently our informers, Messrs. Pete Wilson, club president, and Harold Beanblossom believed we werent impressed. “You shoot?” we were asked. “Oh sure, pool, miniature golf and a mean game of pinball,” we replied, stalling for time or an avenue of escape. “Then we'll shoot a round,” declared Mr. Wilson, producing a double-barreled gun and a box of

)'Brien Shot At

shells. And so we were away to what skeet shooters know as the first station. “You get two birds at each of the eight stations on the first round,” he said. “One from the high house and one from the low house. It's not easy. Those birds come out at 55 miles an hour” We lifted the gun to our shoulder, whispered “Pull” Mr. Wilson wasn’t fooling. The disc-shaped target came out of the hole like the Super Chief coming through Horse Thief Gulch. There was no time to draw a bead. We pulled the trigger and promptly were

kicked back at least three feet, while the clay pigeon landed unharmed somewhere out in the S. Oh well, that was the start. We'd improve. So we asked for the target from the low house and hoped for a change of pace maybe a slow ball, so to speak. But it was another fast one and another miss. By the time we reached Station 4 your correspondent still hadn't touched a bird and was beginning to worry about this

waste of ammunition, in view of national defense and all that. If

w

TANADOLIS TIMES

Bird, Missed

joy there was in this feat was dempened by Mr. Beanblossom'’s uncalled-for remark that Sta= tion 8 is the easiest on the course. Yeah?—well maybe we just hadn't been trying. The nine remaining shells we proposed employing against a rusty beer can, but our hosts had different ideas. We now were going back to Station 1, load two shells and fire at birds released simultaneously from the low and high houses. This would continue from four stations until we had used eight shells and developed a serious case of crossed eyes.

there had been an umpire around, we would have asked him to take “a look at those targets. We could have sworn we were being served spitters or some other illegal delivery. All the while the Messrs. Bean= blossom and Wilson were scatters ing clay ail over the premises, and quite a ctowd had collected, figuring the target-throwing machine was going to get a nohitter. Then at Station 8 it happened. The target from the high house seemed explode in mid-air. What

It But Got

WA

TUESDAY, JULY 29, 1041

The Bird

ful than that of our first round. Gentlemen, we wish to announce that we bagged two full birds on this round. Yes sir, shot ‘em down in cold clay. Of course, Mr. Wilson had shot down some 23, and Beane blossom had plunked 24. Or so they told us—and the story wasn't denied by the official clay pigeon news agency. i But we salvaged something. When our hosts weren't looking, we sneaked off out in the weeds and reclaimed 17 of our 22 une broken targets. They do make swell ash trays.

Mr. Beanblossom stepped up first at Station 1 and, refusing to give the birds even a sporting chance, blasted both before they were scarcely out of their mechanical nests. It was our plan to let both birds go unshot-at and hope they would destroy themselves in a mid-air collision. But nothing so happy as that happened. When it became apparent that we would have to shoot it out, we concentrated on only one target. No use confusing yourself, the gun or the target. This strategy was more success

Seeking Swim Ti

Four little misses who expect ship at High Point. N. C. Aug. 15-17 and the National Swimming on Aug. 22-23 are (left to right) Patsy Brogan, Patty Aspinall, Betty

to tack a title after their names in

tles

2 Ss

the National Women's Champion. Championship at the Riviera Club Bemis and Loraine Bemis.

Big 10 Players 16-Year-Old Kokomo Lassie

Lead Grid Poll Tabbed Junio

CHICAGO. July 20 (UU. P)—8ix LEESBURG, nd. July 20 —SixBig Ten plavers. two from the teen-year-old Joan Brown of KoSouth, two from the Bast and one KOMO was tabbed the early favorite from the Far West led today on/loday as match play began over the the final day of balloting for the! Tibbecance Lake Country Club college all-star football team. jcourse in the Indiana Women's Golf Halfback Tommy Harmon of | Association junior tournament. Michigan topped the field with ogo .| The : Kokomo lassie, defending 114 votes and Augie Lio, George- champion emphasized she was out town guard, was second with 931 236 | to repeat when she fired an 88 durThe contest for the other guard po-|ing the 18-hole qualifying trip yessition was the tightest of the polljterday. And she might have given with Tommy O'Boyle, Tulane, lead-|Par a battle if she hadn't threeing Joe Lokanc, Northwestern, by butted 11 greens 14212. The leaders: | Her foe today was Barbara Ends—Rankin, Purdue, 824.501; | Sanders of the West Lafayette Rucinski, Indiana, 720694; Severin, |Country Club, who put together a

r Golf Favorite

penalty for hitting the fagstick with one of her approach shots. Today's second match paived Louise Davisson of Tippecanoe] against Jeanette Goethels of South Bend. Miss Davisson qualified for] the championship flight with a 91} while Miss Goethels had a 94. | Suzanne Pulliam of Lebanon,

{who qualified with a 91, too, was]

to meet Barbara Lamont of the] Tippecanoe Lake Country Club, the latter gaining a place with a] qualifying score of 100. Eleanor Allen of Ft. Wayne, who qualified with a 90, was to match strokes with Phyllis Shuman of the Limberlost Country Club in the

North Carolina, 512.113. Tackles—|91 in the qualifying round, despite Drahos, Cornell, T76828; Pacnell |tWo lost balls and a two-stroke Texas Aggies, 624397; Uremovich. | Indiana, 6123504. Guards — Lio;| O'Boyle, 825484; Lokane, 811372) Centers—Mucha, Washington, 823. | 417; Gladchuk, Boston College, 784. | 103. Hall, Warrensburg (Mo), 732.-| 844. Quarterbacks—Evashevski, Micii-| n, 874.363; Paffrath, Minnesota, 1596; Schulte, Rockhurst, 759.084. Fullbacks—Paskvan, Wisconsin, 761.- | 847; Piepul, Notre Dame, 728.112:|

i

I.

(U. P)—Ted Schroeder of Glen-| Fnbrough, Texas ages, 652.386. | dale, Cal, seeded No. 4 and LadiIfbacks—Harmon: Franck, Min- gay Hee a ‘ mesota, 048.752; Hahhenstein, Notth- || Ta ot o ~ Yeix Jou te Western. 730 984. ay in the first round of the |

il Meadow Club's 51st annual grass “ke ‘ court invitation tournament. Meridian Hills Is Other ranking plavers, with one! Host fo Ladies [um seit is dt mons yes ye y espie © Os ° ares Atlanta, Ga. upset tightheteeded . The ladies at Meridian Hills are; Bd Alloo of Berkeley, Cal, 6-1, 6-1 expecting 130 guests from 38 clubs/in the first rounds only departure) to participate in their state invita-|from form. : tional gelf tournament tomorrow. Bobby Riggs of Clinton, 8 ©] Arrangements are in the care of|Seeded No. 1, defeated William | Mrs. Ralph L. Flood, women's golf| Rosenbaum of Southampton, 12-10, chairman, and Wayne Titmberman, | 6-2, and Frank Kovacs of Oakland, elub professional. Prizes will be/Cal, seeded No. 2, made short work awarded at a buffet luncheon. cf Vincent Paul of New York, 6-2,

a cl, So €-3. . Cardner Mulloy of Coral Gables, Cottey Loses Fla, No. 3 won over Chauncey D. CHICAGO, 11, July 28 (U. Pp) — | Steele of Cambridge, Mess, 2-8) Bud Cottey. 120, Indianapolis, lost!8-6, 8-6; Bryan Grant, Atlanta, No. an eight-round decision to Eddie|3, eliminated Irwin Powell, SouthLander, 131'%, Chicago, during last ampton, 6-3, 6-0; Gilbert Hunt, night's fistic program at Marigold | Providence, R. I, No. 6, ousted Bill Gardens. Canning, Hjdden Valley, Cal. 6-3.

Baseball At a Glance

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Pet. Sihntanelie 619 bus ..... 38 388 Suisvitle ........ 3%

sas City vs 88 TANAPOLIS .. 31

Coiiel. BO BIB Go0— 2 3 003 500 1ix— 9 14 1

nahan, Steat and SchiveRensa,

109 30 !

| St. Paul ..... ho | Minneapolis 21% Hildebrand, IF ten ogsett an $14! 25 | toledo 010-2 3 8 § ¢| Columbus COI ‘ x13 §8 © 1 \ eo Billditti Rimbetiin He Lie rathe: and

1 i

pindel; Dickson an AMERICAN LEAGUE

GB No games scheduled.

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NATIONAL LEAGUE No games scheduled.

GAMES TODAY

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION INDIANAPOLIS at Ypuitvite. Meebo 2 k KARAS “Cit Toledo at Cetumbas. =

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AMERICAN LEAGUE L 8

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29 1n 8 IR AMERICAN LEAGUE Cleveland at W . 35 Shicage at Eran Detroit at New A St. Lewis at Boston.

As 438 396 36 301 RESULTS YESTERDAY AMERICAN ASSOCIATION

geese FEEL.

NATIONAL LEAGUE n at St,

k * New York at Binotanati fohmite, Makeshy, Kolo and fodd:| Botton at Pitishur Re and Barto]a, Robinson. Philadelphia at Chicago.

; Lists n af 545 P.M. Daily except

Alloo Becomes First Seeded Casualty on Southampton Court

SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y, July 20[6-2; Bill Talbert, Cincinnati. No. 7,

| Hampton.

|New Yok, 6-4, 6-3; Virginia Wolf-

other championship duel. Miss Shuman had a 92 yesterday.

defeated Joey Fishbach, New York,

ay

EAST HAMPTON, N. Y., July 20 (U.P) —Top-seeded Mrs. Sarah Palfrey Cooke of New York. winner of four straight tournaments, plays| Judy Atterbury of New York in the | second round of the 16th annual invitation Women's Tennis Tournament at the Maidstone Club today. Mrs, Cooke wen her first round match yesterday with a 6-0, 6-0 conquest of Mrs. J. B. Maguire of East All favored players, with the exception of Mrs, Owen Anderson of England, seeded third in the foreign listings, triumphed. Mrs. Anderson was defeated by Nellie Sher of Miami, 6-1, 6-3. Other results included: Pauline Betz of Winter Park, Fla, elim-| inated Mrs. L. R. Ganzenm iller o

{

enden of San Francisco, triumphed over Dorothy Wightman of Boston, 6-1, 6-1; Nina Brown of England defeated Donald Gillingham of Philadelphia, 6-2, 6-4; Dorothy May Bundy of Santa Monica, Cal, won over Patricia Canning of Lafayette, Cal, 6-2, 2-6, 6-0.

Webb Knocked Out

PITTSBURGH, July 20 (U.P) — Jimmy Webb's hopes for a fight with Gust Lesnevich for the lightheavyweight title vacated by Billy Conn were sent glimmering today by Mose Brown, McKeesport Negro, who knocked out Webb in the second round of their scheduled 10round bout at Hickey Park last night after having Webb on the

So Louisville's Hospitable, Eh? Ask Our Tribe

Indians .Are Given Rough Treatment

Times Special LOUISVILLE, Ky. July 20.— After the first taste of visiting in the East again, the Indianapolis Indians are wondering whether their American Association foes east of the Mississippi will be the perfect host those in the West have been.

The Louisville Colonels’ entertainment last night was hardly the type to please the visiting Indians. The Bluegrass boys allowed the Hoosiers five fat runs, then pro-

1

| [ceeded to erase this big lead with

a4 seven-run rally in the seventh. All this eventually ended with a 7-6 victory for Louisville. Southpaw Wilfrid Lebevre started on the mound for the Colonels, but he lasted for only three innings and was replaced by Owen Scheetz. The Tribe plated a pair of runs in the first, another in the second and two in the fifth, the eredit for driving four of them home going to Benny Zientara, Kermit Lewis and Johnny Pasek, with two. Then came that awful sixth in which the Colonels drove young Glenn Fletcher from the hill with four straight hits. He was replaced by Lloyd Johnson, but the Colonels continued to hit and run until they had amassed seven runs. In the eighth inning, the Tribe regained one of these, and in the ninth, after two outs, Wayne Ambler singled and Benny Zientara slammed out a two-bagger. Ambler was caught at the plate, however, to retire the side and end the game.

——————————————————————

Co At It Again

DETROIT, July 20 (U.P) —Two portly men whose names are indelibly written in baseball's hall of me battle on the golf course toay. Tyrus Raymond Cobb, the “Georgia Peach,” and George Herman Ruth, the greatest home run hitter of all time, meet on the Grosse Ile Country Club course this afternoon in the third and deciding 18 holes of a match they started at Boston a month ago. Cobb got a 8 and 2 victory in the first match, but Ruth squared matters at New York June 27 when Cobb three-putted on the 10th green from 20 feet, Tagging along with them will be Walter Hagen, veteran professional, and the once-mysterious John Montague. The match will be strictly between Cobb ahd Ruth, southpaws on the golf course as well as the diamond. Although Ruth frequently shoots in the high 70s, both he and Cobb carded 85s during their last match at New York. Both were wild off the tees, unsteady on the greens. Although the second Ruth-Cobhb match drew only 200 spectators. promoters were confident they'd have a larger audience here. ®roceeds of the matches go to the United Service Organizations,

Ducat Sale Starts

bb and Ruth

~ Hoosier-Owned Stepper

Tom Berry drives Baron, brown colt by Protector, in a work-out for the famed Hambletonian, which will be held at Good Time Park in Goshen Aug. 6. The star 3-year-old is owned by Leo C. McNamara of Indianapolis.

Washington Typos Back in Thick of Baseball Title Fight

Watch out for Washington! That wag the ery at Riverside Park today as the Union Printers International baseball tournament moved into the third round. The Capitol City typos emphasized that they are going after another championship yesterday when they frolicked at Baltimore's expense and scored a 22-8 victory. After taking a 12-8 lacing from New York in the opening round of play, the Wash« ington club jumped on three Baltimore pitchers, cracked out 24 hits and experienced only one scoreless inning.

Today Washington was to meet the undefeated Boston club in one of three games, but top billing went to the New York-Detroit clash, since both are still in the unbeaten ranks. In the third game St. Louis was to oppose Twin Cities.

Three of the 10 starters were out of competition today by virtue of their second losses. Those on the sidelines were Indianapolis, Baltimore and Cincinnati. New York put Indianapolis out of competition when the Hoosiers failed to connect except in the sec ond and ninth innings. The first tally was a home run by Maurie Wellman, New York scored cons sistently, counting four runs in a big sixth inning for the 10-3 triumph. A three-hit game by Bechard of Detroit enabled the Motor City boys to put the skids under the Twin Cities, 5 to 1. Neither team scored until the sixth, when Twin Cities pushed over a run to take the lead. But in the next three innings, Detroit held its foes scoreless while tallying five. The fireworks came early in the Chicago-Cincinnati game, with each scoring three runs in the first. But that was all for Cincinnati, while the Windy City boys collected eight mote for an 11-3 conquest. Following today's games tournament players and visitors were to be taken to the Motor Speedway for a special exhibition race.

A Close One

$ & 3 A

Eddie Edwards . . . pilots the Washington club.

a

Defense Topic At Grid Parley

MIAMI REACH, Fla, July 29 (U P).-—-The National Association of Football Commissioners at its three« day meeting here today was cone cerned chiefly with co-ordination of

Browns also were going to get going

American League Still Has Two

Attractions: Yankee Soloists And Fight for Seventh Place -

)

New York's Streaks Keep Crowds Coming

By HARRY FERGUSON United Press Sports Editor

NEW YORK, July 29.— Now that the Yankees have rolled right up to the door of the World Series, there are only two things left to keep up the suspense in the Amer-

ican League. You can see them both any day the team is in town, and they are: 1. The race among the individual Yankees to break records. 2. The death struggle that is going on for seventh place in the league. You see one of them on the field where the Yankees are hitting, field= ing and running. You see the other one on the big scoreboard where the inning-by-inning scores of the other teams are posted, That enables you to keep up with the terrific battle being waged by the

Washington Senators and the St. Louis Browns.

DiMag After Another

The records and streaks that the Yankees are going in for have caused the attendance to hold up remarkably well considering that the team new Is so far out in front that nobody believes it can be caught, Here are some of the streaks individual Yankees . are working on at the moment: Joe DiMaggio, after setting a major league record by hitting in 56 consecutive games, has now started another streak. He has batted safely in 11 games. Little Phil Rizzuto, who is developing into a star at shortstop, has hit in 10 consecutive games. Charlie Ruffing, the veteran pitcher, has won nine straight games and has raised his lifetime victories to 241. DiMaggio and Charlie Keller are having a hard fight in two important departments of hitting. Keller has hit 26 home runs; Dimaggio, 23, Keller has batted in 89 runs; DiMaggio, 88.

Athletics Double-Cross

The neck-and-neck race between the Senators and the Browns has been going on for two months. At the start of the season it seemed that it would be a three-cornered fight with the Philadelphia Athletics involved. But Connie Mack's boys double-crossed everybody and played good ball in spurts. A team has to be consistently bad to stay in the Browns-Senators fight. Last week it seemed that the

uffing

WISIN

and play some decent baseball, Charlie R

thereby leaving the Senators in glorious and undisputed possession of last place. The Browns moved into Washington on Friday and knocked over the Senators, 5 to 3. Next day they again smacked ‘em down, 6 to 6. It looked like the end of the thrilling “cellar series,” but on Sun-

Grapplers Gripe About Hold

college football with the national defense program and a uniform interpretation of football rules. A report by John L. Griffith, of the Western Conference, on plans to co-ordinate college football with national defense was expected to

For ‘Pack the Park’

Tickets for the third annual “Pack the Park” night, at Perry Stadium Aug. 7, will go on sale today at L. Strauss & Co. headquarters, and all Haag drug stores, Jack C. Meyers, co-chairman, said today. The ducats will sell at the usual Perry Stadium admission charges, Mr, Meyers announced. The event, sponsored by Voiture 145 Forty and Eight, American Legion, is a child welfare project of the organization. The Indianapolis Indians will entertain the Minneapolis Millers that night. Special guests will be Robert Fel ler, Cieveland's star pitcher, and Trig Speaker, by-gone outfielder and

highlight today's session. Griffith has been in Washington conferring with Army officials. In addition. the commissioners were to discuss and make recomsmendations on new signals designed to aid fans in interpreting rules violations and consider appointment of officials for college games. The opening session of the Association yesterday was devoted mainly to organization but produced various comments from members | who attended. ; Asa S. Bushnell, representing the Eastern Intercollegiate Football As-

sociation, said he believed that as a Mo

result of the draft collegiate teams

would schedule soldier elevens dur=| yi qq

ing the next three years. While most colleges have their schedules come pleted for this fall, a few games between college and service teams

floor twice in the first round.

batting hero.

will be played, he said.

NEW YORK, July 20 (U. P).— The Brooklyn Dodgers, early favvorites to win the 1041 National League flag, are hanging on the ropes and the St. Louis Cardinals, leading the circuit by two games, hope to give them the knockout punch in their two-game series opening in St. Louis today. When Brooklyn left on the current western junket, it promised to be the toughest test of the season. That forecast has been borne out during the past seven days. The Dodgers have won only two games out of seven and now roost precariously in second place. Two weeks ago every pitcher that Manager Leo Durocher summoned to duty came through with a wine ning effort. Recently it's been just the opposite. The ace of the staff, veteran Whitlow Wyatt, hasn't won a game since July 5 and to add weight to reports that he is sufferfrom a sore arm, has been knocked from the box in his last four starts.

Hoosier! 3

=, 1

%

ak

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Now's the Time for the St. Looeys to Put The Kayo on Those Groggy Brooklyns

righthander and most overworked hurler on the staff, hasn't delivered a winning performance since July 15. He's been kayoed in two starts

since then and has tuned up far his important job against the Cards and Lon Warnecke today by relieving in three of the last five games, The case of Hugh Casey is even sadder. The portly righthander hasn't gone the route and won since June 20. He made his first start since July 13 last Sunday and lasted

long enough to give the Pittsburgh Pirates eight hits and most of the ball game. “Hot Potato” Luke Hamlin, who has made a specialty of home run balls—pitching them, not hitting them—in his major league tenure, has assumed a suddenly important role for Brooklyn. Winner of his last start against the Pirates for victory No. 6, Hamlin will pitch against the Cardinals in the second game of the series. Brooklyn's chances of staying in the race may depend on whether or not he can

just four and one-third innings,

restrain the St. Louis sluggers, who at last reports had six regulars hitting 300 or over. In the American League, the New York Yankees, leading by 11% games, have ended the flag “race” for all but the statisticians. They have won 26 out of their last 20, 40 out of their last 47 and have clouted a season's total of 109 home runs. Charley Keller, Joe DiMaggio and Tommy Henrich lead the majors with 25, 23 and 19 homers respec tively, DiMaggio is runner-up to Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox in batting percentages with 378 to 408, and is off on a fresh consecutive game hitting streak of 11 straight. Keller leads the runs batted in column with 80 to DiMaggio's 88.

| EASY TERMS

INDIANAPOLIS

Mazgay, Ambler, Aientara, Lewis, rf Hunt, 1t Bestudik

Crt Se SS BS

GHL Pp «« «iis Fletcher, p Johnson, Pp (ioe Lakeman Galatzer

Total ..,.....:...86 8 Lakeman batted for Johnson in ninth, Galatzer batted for Mazgay in ninth,

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Totals Judd batted for Scheetz in sixth.

210 200 010-8 000 007 00x==7

Indianapolis Louisville

Rung batted in—=Zientara, Lewis, Pasek 2, Andres, Mazer 2, Morgan, Pesky 32, Casen, Bestudik., Two-base hits—Pasek, Andres, Morgan, Hunt, Zientara. Threehit—Zientara. Sacrifices—~Shokes, ¥. Double play-—Shokes to Ambler to Shokes, Left on bases—Indianapolis §, Louisville 10. Base on balls=Gill Fletcher 1, Johnson 1, Fleming 1. Strike outs—Seheetz 2, Johnson 1, Femin Hits—Off Lefebvre 6 in 3 innings 4p

ifoned to three in fourth), Scheetz 2 in 3, Gill § in 5 (pitched to four in sixth), Fletcher 1 in '4 Johnson 5 in 22%, Fleming 8 in 3, Passed ball—Laey. Winning piteher— Scheetz, Losin {teher—Fleteher. pires—Boyer an urtis. ‘Time-1:58,

Bowling Notes

The Marott Ladies Bowling League will hold its annual business meeting at 8 p. ‘'m. Thursday at the Pritchett Alleys.

OUTBOARD MOTORS

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BLUE POINT

Rt

3 [for burial in the family plot.

day the Browns promptly dropped back to their normal form and got licked in a double-header, 4 to 3 and 5 to 3. The Washington pitchers completely crossed up everybody by giving only five hits in the first game and seven in the second. That left the Senators only half v game ahead of the Browns. The tight probably will go right on down to the wire, Do you think you can stand the suspense?

Rites Thursday For Coach Jones

LOS ANGELES, July 20 (U. P) ~ Funeral services for Howard Harding Jones, 55, football coach at the University of Southern California and a famous sports figure for 33 years, will be held Thursday afternoon in the First Methodist Church of Hollywood. The services will be conducted by Dr. Glenn Randall Phillips, a friend of Jones. Members of the 1941 USC football team will be ushers. T. A. D. (Tad) Jones, his brother, left New York yesterday for Los Angeles. He will arrive Thursday in time for the funeral and will accoms= pany the body to Middletown, O, two miles from Jones’ birthplace,

Jones died Sunday of a heart attack.

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Dorve (Iron Man) Roche, the former coal miner from Decatur,

Ill, who has introduced the “octoe pus” hold to local wrestling fans, swings into action against Orville Brown of Wichita, Kas. to headeline tonight's outdoor mat card at Sports Arena. The match, listed for two falls out of three, brings together two top ranking rival heavyweights, Dorve used the “octopus,” a pune ishing grip, to defeat Orville two weeks ago. Brown insists it is not legal, is a new form of the strangle hold and should be barred. Herbie Freeman, a victim of Roche last week, feels the same as Brown, It is a tussle promising an une usual amount of action. Roche scales 220 and Orville weighs around 228. In other bouts, Steve Brody mixes with Jules Le Rence and Charlie Lay opposes Dave Reynolds, the show to begin at 8:30.

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