Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 January 1943 — Page 8

to talking things over

that Dick Fowler,

PR board

‘new world tance,

a ee

SPORTS...

By E

ddie Ash.

THE CALLING of baseball players by selective serv- - ice is expected to increase during the next two months

and poses a real manpower sport. ;

problem for the diamond

- By the time spring training rolls around it’s no telling how the club rosters, will look. . . . The experts are going to have a rough

time predicting the races. The 1943 American association

schedule calls for Indianapolis

to open on the road, April 29, at Toledo. . , . The opener at Victory

. field will be May 5, against the Mud Hens. . . . at home last year, playing the Columbus Red Birds.

One announcement on the 1943

. The Indians opened

schedule had Toledo playing in

Indianapolis April 29. .’. . The Hoosier Indians only plan two exhibi-

_ tion games at Victory field, April 24 and 25. , . . Other exhibitions

are to be played in Bloomington, Terre Haute and perhaps in other

spots in the “paw-paw league.”

Roy Hamey, general manager of the Kansas City Blues, is to “explore” the Hoosier state next week searching for a training

spot for his champions.

\ camp. , . . He will work out of Indianapolis until he finds a suitable

Niggeling ‘Had It’ Under the Lights

: THE St. Louis Browns were the American league’s best night owls in 1942, winning 16 of 23 games under the lights. . . . Johnny

. Niggeling, the Browns’ veteran knuckleballer, formerly of the Indi-

anapolis Indians, paced the St. Louis pitchers in arc light competition with six victories and no defeats. When Niggeling was with Indianapolis he figured his big league ‘days were over, . . . But he achieved a comeback and Cincinnati

« . « He’s invaluable now. . shows no signs of weakening. » ” #

. purchased him. , , . Later the Reds passed him on to the Browns. . The veteran is draft proof and his arm

» » ”

DEE MOORE, the catcher drafted by Brooklyn from New Orleans,

"may get a trial at third base. . . . He took a few turns at the hot corner when a member of the Indianapolis Indians. . . "hit any too well with the Hoosiers and was hard to handle. . , . He's

. Moore didn’t

a versatile chap in baseball, however, a valuable asset in wartime.

Lang Lonesome in St. Petersburg AL PF. LANG, former mayor of St. Petersburg, Fla., and the man

who did more than any other one

person to persuade major and

‘class AA teams that Florida offered the best training accommoda-

tions of any state in the Eastern half of the country, is geing to be a mighty lonesome man this spring when the ball clubs train north

of the Landis-Eastman Mason and

Dixon line (north of the Ohio

and Potomac rivers, east of the Mississippi).

“I'm

like a fish out of water,” Lang wrote the Cincinnati Post

from St. Petersburg. “This will be the first spring since 1914 that have not had my gang around me in St. Petersburg and I am cer-

tainly going to miss the bunch.”

» ” 8

“MY GANG,” to Al Lang is any bunch of ball players, writers and camp followers. ..~. He knows them all, but the global war made

him an orphan for this spring as far cerned.

as his baseball friends are con-

The Indianapolis Indians trained in St. Petersburg in 1920 in

Lang's early years as mayor of the

city. . . . Jack Hendricks was

Hoosier pilot and the late Pat Moran skippered the Cincinnati Reds : who trained in gaudy Miami in 1920 when the Florida real estate

boom was just beginning to fake full blast.

8 » #

IN LATER YEARS, the Hoosiers pitched camps in Florida at

Plant City, Sarasota, Wauchula, Bart

ow and Cocoa. . .. No. 1 on that

list was Sarasota by-the-sea. .. .It sported an elegant beach and

‘plenty of fishing.

College Football Can't Miss

Being Better at

By HARRY

War's End

GRAYSON

Times Special Writer NEW YORK, Jan. 16.—College football can’t miss coming out of the war in better shape than when it went in.

Bucked by the usual problems, with their

games which are natura. the schools. Nobody is hurt.

Connie Mack Is Re-elected

PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 16 (U. PJ). ~—Manager Connie Mack said today right-handed

Canadian pitcher,’ had taken his

final physical examination at To-

ronto, Can., and would be inducted into the Canadian army Mack also announced that Calvin Coolidge McIrvin, a southern hurler who was farmed to the Wilmington and Lancaster clubs in the Inter- * State league last year, already was in the army. pitched in 31 games for the A's year. He won six and ‘Jost 11 and had an earned-run f 4.95. annual meeting of the|© f directors; Mack was “for his seventh term as the

‘Hagg’s Record Is Approved

LONDON, Jan. 16 (U. P.) —The

. four-minute, four and 6-10 seconds

mile effort of Sweden’s . Gunder Hagg will go into the books as a standard for the disthe Interantional Amateur Athletic Federation announced to-

day.

The Swedish star has bettered ‘world marks at several distances, and turned in the mile run ‘at tockholm on Sept. 4, 1942, eclipsthe standard of 4:64 estab-

Ine by Sydney Wooderson of

England in 1937.

It Wasn't in New Orleans

schedule-makers are getting around

immediate neighbors and arranging Is, if for no other reason than the proximity of Transportation is no insurmountable

problem. Crowds are just as good and‘ everyone is happy. Such a

itself well with all war angles and helps the game. No game of football is more exciting than that-in which there is a natural incentive to win. Intersectional games, for the most part, are a fad and an excuse to show the kids the country. Outside the sphere of the institutions concerned, nobody. cares about the outcome, unless the rivals are champions of their respective sections. 8 » # By returning to the wars as abruptly as he called it a career, Sammy Angott rekindles in the minds of some suspicion that there was something sca-rewy in connection with his announced retirement. Stories were circulated that Angott took a powder under pressure of shady individuals. Angott pleaded bad hands and inability to do 135 pounds with the greatest of ease. When Angott dropped out of it, for the time being at least, Beau Jack, whom he is to meet for the title in March, had not realized any great prominence, Thére was a poor field of contenders. Now, with Jack on top of the heap and an opponent with whom he can collect important money, Angott has every right to return to the wars for something worth while.

2 EJ ® Championships are still won in the ring, and a champion has a perfect right to change his mind about quitting once he has the urge again, provided he can pass a physical and is not outlawed by the statute of

centralization of competition lends}

Hoosiers Have |

Chicago Serap By TOMMY DEVINE United Press Staff Correspondent CHICAGO, Jan. 16~—Tllinois attempts to continue its headlong dash toward a second straight Big Ten basketball championship tonight ‘when it meets Towa at Cham-

schedule. In other contests Indiana faces Chicago at Chicago. Wisconsin plays the second game of its series with Michigan at Ann Arbor, Purdue opposes Minnesota at Minneapolis and Northwestern goes outside . the league to take on Notre Dame. . Illinois was installed as the heavy pre-season favorite for the title and the proteges of Coach Doug Mills fortified their right to that ranking by the decisive manner in ‘which they handled their opening conference opponents, Michigan and. Wisconsin, Ken Menke, brilliant forward who finished 10th in the individual scoring race last season with 134 points in league play, will return to the Illinois lineup against Iowa. He has been sidelined with a foot injury. Menke and Phillip ~ Menke will pair with Andy Phillip to give Illinois the most dangerous pair. of forwards in the loop. Phillip leads the conference’s individual scorers with 43 points. Iowa split its opening series with Minnesota. The Hawkeyes dropped the first contest, 46-45, but then came back to take the second, 48-41. ‘Their chances against Illinois rests principally on Tom Chapman and Ben Trickey who will have to outscore Menke and Phillip to keep the team in the running. The remainder of Iowa’s personnel can't match Illinois. Indiana now looms as the biggest threat to Illinois and the Hosiers have a “soit touch” in Chicago.

Wolves Trip Wisconsin

Indiana tripped Ohio State twice in the opening series and should down Chicago by whatever margin it wants. The Maroons have lost 32 straight Big Ten games and

in sight. Chicago lost its initial league game to Purdue, 59 to 22. Minnesota gave indications it may develop into’ a threat if Bill Lind and Bernie Nelson can maintain the scoring pace they set in. the Iowa series. In those two games the Gopher stars bagged 48 points, but failed to receive the necessary help from their mates. Purdue still must prove itself. The Boilermakers beat . Chicago easily, but that game failed to provide an adequate test of "Pieey” Lambert's outfit. An underdog Michigan team upset Wisconsin in the first of a twogame series last night, 38-34, winning after the lead had changed hands 17 times. Bob Sullivan of Wisconsin led both teams in scoring with 11 points. Wisconsin's Johnny Kotz, who set a Big Ten scoring record last year, was limited to three goals and a free throw.

7 Track Events On Tap Today

NEW YORK, Jan. 16 (U. P.).— The first section ot the senior metropolitan A. A. U. track and field championships—a program of seven events, including the mile run—will be held at New York university's Ohio field today. Wartime conditions prevented the A. A. U. from obtaining an indoor site this year, so the first outdoor date in the meet’s history will be held. The second section will be run off at Columbia’s South field next Saturday. The mile run, which: will feature Frank Dixon, N. Y, U.’s sensational freshman, tabbed as successor to Les MacMitchell, will be run off in two sections, the fastest time deciding the winners,

Emmett Lowery

Succeeds Taube

LAFAYETTE, Jan. 16 (U. P.).— Emmett Lowery, Purdue universtiy head freshman football coach, was appointed acting assistant varsity basketball coach today. Lowery, former three sports star, came to Purdue last fall. He succeeds Mel Taube, who was appointed a lieutenant in the navy last week.

Back on Duty

Easy Test in |!

paign in the feature game of the|

there’s no end to the losing streak].

This. young lady is Miss Virginia Winther, but after Toatght she will be Mrs. Bob Feller, wife of the former Cleveland Indians’ pitching ace, and currently a chief machinist’s mate in the navy. will be married tonight in the First Methodist church at Waukegan, Il, climaxing a spring training camp romance which started in 1940.

The couple

Yanks, Giants Are at Odds

NEW YORK, Jan. 16 (U. P).— The friendly relations that have existed for years between the New York Giants and the New York Yankees were ruptured-today by a conflict in exhibition game dates that Giant President Horace Stoneham threatened to carry before Commissioner K. M. Landis. The feud started when the Yanks and the Brooklyn Dodgers shuffled their spring schedule and booked games at Yankee stadium for April 16, 17 and 18. Stoneham contends that through a long-time understanding - the Yanks and the Giants alternated playing at home the’ week before the season opened. This year, he contended, it was the Giants’ turn, and the Yankee-Dodger © series breaks the unwritten agreement. He protested to both clubs and to Naitonal League President Ford Frick and because both leagues are involved, he was expected to take it before Landis.

League Operation

Is Still in Doubt

EBENSBURG, Pa. Jan. 16 (U. P.) —Operation of the mid-At-lantic and Penn State baseball leagues during 1943 may depend upon whether present traveling restrictions are relaxed, Elmer Daily, president of the Jeagues, said today. Daily said that under present regulations it would be difficult’ for fans to get to the ball parks. He added that the leagues may not be able to decide definitely regarding 1943 operations until early March.

High School

LOCAL HIGH SCHOOLS

Tech, 39; Manual, 37%. i , 42; Broad Ripple, 25. St iers, 47; Edinburg, 34. Crispus Attucks, 26; Dunbar (Dayton, 0.), 19.

| e—— OTHER HIGH SCHOOLS

Arcadia, A 34. , 42; Ga » Aon, 37; Crawfordsville, 28, Attica, 36; 26.

Vee arren Central, 27; xandris, 22, Maton 25; Morton “Memorial, 23. Elm 20; Arcola, 15. : Aurora, 38; Vevay, 16, 16. v rRe ; Geneva, : Bloomington, 36; Redte rd, 24. Bunker Hill, 41; Young America, 23. Battle Ground, 39; Stolkwell, 24. Roach 46; Bainbri e. 33. . ; Brigh 27. Cambridge. "city, 18.

11, 38; Wolf ja’ City, 30; Decatur, 20.

Col lainfield, 2

; Dan 37; tal Central,

e). :-Wirt (Gary), » Ry gop, Se an.

nel, »

South Bend Central Upset By Goshen Cagers, 30-26

Rochester's Zebras kept a firm grip-on the top position in state high school basketball rankings today after coasting to their 12th victory of an undefeated season last night, sinking Tipton, 43-27. However, the Marion Giants were still blowing hot breath on the neck of the leaders as they bounced back to defeat Richmond, 31-22, for their 11th triumph. The Giants’ victory marked a personal triumph for

Coach Orville Hooker's boys, who had been tabbed as “winning on borrowed time” and were underdogs against Richmond. The Giants met their first defeat of the season last

| week against Muncie Central to fall

from No. 1 spot in the weekly statewide poll. It was the second time Marion had beaten Richmond this year. ; Principal upsets on last night's fat cage card was the defeat of South Bend Central's Bears by Goshen, 30-26, for their second defeat in 10 starts.

In 5th Position Johnny Woolen’s Bears were in fifth

i position behind Muncie Burris in the

latest ratings, but. Burris annexed victory No. 10 in 11 starts last night by downing Elwood, 44-28, to remain among prep leaders. Many - red-hot conference rivalry battles studded the slates. Martinsville and Shelbyville fought it out until the final seconds when the Artesians dropped Shelbyville, 46-45, for their 10th win in 12 tries. A powerful Bloomington offense dumped Bedford in the S. I. A. C,, 36-24, and other southern loop games found Sullivan dropping Evansville Bosse, 29-27, and league-leading Jasper downing Princeton 35-30. Greensburg sank Connersville, 5131, and Mark Wakefield's alwaysgood Evansville Central five turned back Vincennes, 26-23.

Bulldogs Win

Columbus’ Bulldogs defeated Franklin, 49-22, and in the Wabash valley, Bloomfield met its first defeat at the hands of Linton, 39-24. In north-central Indiana, New|: Castle handed Frankfort its eighth loss, 50-30, © Kokomo dropped Logansport, 26-23, and an-improving Lafayette team of Marion Crawley whipped Muncie Central, 40-31. In the north, Gary Lew Wallace captured its eighth win by downing Hammond Tech, 34-22, Gary Emerson dropped city-rival Horace Mann, 30-28, and East Chicago. Roosevelt

: i Gentral (Ey

vg (Gary), °8,

2 ong, 3

downed Hammond, 43-39.

College Tro Results

er Casile, 59 50; Frankton, 30. . ayuga 3 Newpo! Central of Lawrence, 29; New Augusta,

Orleans, 44; Campbellsburg, 26, Winslow, 40; Oakland City, 15.

Peru, 38; Delphi, 22. Royal Center, 50; Lucerne, 24. Russiaville, 20; Ervin, 18. Seymour, 35; Rushville, 28. Speedway, a Beech Grove, Sl.

iy {30 ath Te d), 34; ul na), ’ (South Bend), resville, — S| Stineayile lle, 84; Un So 1th) rf, 3%; Sreenwond, 27. She. idan, 32; Atlant: artinsville, 46: by ville, 45. - - Spartanburg, 4 0; Jackson Twp., 34. Twelve Mile, alveston,, 21. Rocaester, — ipton, 2%.

ansville), an: Catholie

Adams

encer, versity School (Bloom-

s, 23. (Washington) 21. Walnut Economy, 38; Bigiens ' Whitewater ter, 5 Fountain City, 28. | 'Wolcottville, 44 a, 1%

paella rail Twp. (How- : (Gary), 30; Horace Mann Roosevelt : (East Chicago), 43; Ham"Wahses. (Gan) 84: Hammond Tech, 22.

Washington (East Chiammons, 1; v Jalparaise, 3.

State, 41;

: Washington, Tech Bump 12 City Foes

‘lthe deciding factor in the Tech-

- {Maas pushed in a shot from under

Rockets, leading all the way at the

- {the end of the half when they drove

Accuracy at the foul line proved Si

Manual inter-city clash at the East Side gym last night as the Big Green barely hurdled the Redskins, 39-37. Washington turned on the

| power to wallop Broad Ripple, 42-25, 3 | lin the other local game played.

Manual outscored the highly-

rated five of Coach Alvin Shumm,| §&

16-13, from the field and with less than a minute to play, the score was knotted at 37-all. But Charlie

the basket to put a clincher on the ball game. . ! The Continentals from Washing ton had little trouble with the

West Side gym. The Rockets displayed their biggest threat close to

to within four points of the Continentals. O’'Briens Set Pace

The O’Brien twins, Walter and

Waller, set the pace for Washington| : in the final half and during the}:

game racked up 10 and 11 points, respectively. > Other contests last night found the Silent Hoosiers spanking Edinburg, 47-34, and Crispus Attucks marking up its fourth consecutive triumph. by slapping Dunbar, 2619. Park School rallied in the second half to down a fighting bunch of sailors from the Naval Armory, 39-23. Triple Overtime A triple overtime battle between Decatur Central and Brownsburg with the latter winning by a twopoint margin, 37-35, featured the county net games last night. Brownsburg held a 20-18 margin at the half. Warren Central knocked off Alexandria, 27-22; ° Central of Lawrence clipped New Augusta, 29-22; Speedway whipped Beech Grove, 32-21, and Southport outsped Greenwood, 37-27. ‘ ;

Sad Record

GAS CITY, Jan. 16 (U. PJ). - —Coach Wilbur Cummins of Gas City high school basketball team sadly claimed a record today. D Cummins said three members of his first 10—Jake Adrianson, Wilbur Bruner and Bernard Shively—will report for army induction within two weeks.

4 Net Games Are Canceled

By UNITED PRESS

Four eleventh-hour cansaliakions have reduced tonight's state basketball card from its original 12 games to only eight contests, but with Indiana and Purdue battling to preserve unblemished Big Ten records, Hoosiers interest was at a. peak. Manchester meets Central Normal in the only collegiate conference game. In non-loop contests, Butler opposes Ft. Knox at Jeffersonville, home of Butler captain Fred Hunckler; Ball State invades Western Michigan; Evansville hosts Southern Illinois, and Concordia of River Forest, Ill, plays at Concordia of Ft. Wayne. Cancellations wiped out Indiana Central at Peru Naval Base (to be played Jan. 19), Earlham at Baer Field, Taylor at Wheaton, Ill, and Huniington at Joliet, Ill

Horne Wins

BOSTON, Jan. 16 (U. P).— George (Sonny) Horne, brilliant Niles, O., middleweight, won a split decision over Eddie Ellis of Quincy in one of two eight-round feature bouts at a Boston Boxing association show at Mechanics building to-

Dayton, 49 Monti 21. | Dayton. "io; Monticello,

night before 2500 fans.

Goodland, 21. aer,

Fowler, 27;

ester, Fairmount, 39; Sweetser, fe Bgraen, (Gaal), §3; Billpes Catholic, Wakarusa, 3 New Paris, 3 Lake . Madison ‘rowaship (St. Joseph), 32.

MARSHALL COUNTY TOURNEY

WELLS UN TOURNEY :

Liberty Caister oe Eamon 3%. Union, 28; Jackson, Rock Creek, 20; Lancaster, 27. Ossian, 34; Chester, 19,

CLINTON Dy TOURNEY Michigantown, 4%; Sugar Creek, 20. Jackso! hig Township, 28; 8 cleville, 27. 34; Berson To ip, 20. Colfax, 44; Mulberry, 18 DELAWARE COUNTY TOURNEY

Selma, 62; Wabi ie D: Drilled Quan, 22, MONTGOMERY COUNTY TOURNEY Bowers, 87; Rf : Syeand, 36.

adorn cy

Bob Arthur

Bob Arthur Is ‘Galento’ Type

‘When Pvt. Willard Reed of Camp Atterbury steps into action against

{Bob « Arthur in the Armory ring

Tuesday night he will be facing a fighter of the “Tony Galento” type, according to word from Columbus, o., Arthur's home town. _ Arthur, scaling 195 pounds against 189 for Reed, boasts 21 consecutive victories and the heavyweight championship of Ohio. Willard is Indiana's heavyweight champ, having captured the title only a short while ago and just before entering the service. The popular Indianapolis

| battler was a star under the banner - {of the -Times-Legion Golden Gloves

tourneys, The Arthur-Reed scrap is for eight rounds and features the boxing part of a combination wrestling and fistic: show being staged by Matchmaker Lloyd Carter for the benefit of the sports division of ‘the infantile paralysis fund. There will be two scraps of four rounds each and two grappling encounters.

“Lord” Lansdowne and Billy Ven-.

able men in the mat feature, with another tussle bringing together Martino Angelo and Coach Billy Thom. ’

Bums Choose Beai: Mountain

NEW YORK, Jan. 16 (U. P.).— Selection of Bear Mountain, N. Y., by the Brooklyn Dodgers as their spring training base left only four major league clubs without close-to-home conditioning camps today. The Dodgers will begin training at the summer resort on March 15 and will return to Ebbets Field for their first exhibition game against the Boston Red Sox April 3. In case squad will use the U. S. military academy’s field house at West Point, four. miles away. Last year the Dodgers conditioned at Havana, Cuba, and were schedvled:to work out at West Palm Beach, Fla., for 1943 before the major league clubs were asked to help solve wartime transportation

Upset Wave fs

Hits Ga rden

Jackie ‘Wilson, we

| lenger,

weight contender, were chief viet: last night in the greatest wave of

Square Garden. =. Mitchel Field, N. ¥., lost a 10-ro:nd Motta of the Bronx, and Peralta, in

of Los Angeles, former feather= licked in 1941. # Army for lobinson

heavier opponent LaMotta, Peralta was favored at 22 to 1 oer Wright. In similar fashion, the ‘a= vorites in the four prelimina:ies were outpointed ¢: knocked out, giving the longshot players a fi:ld night. Sergt. Wilson suffered the costs liest upset, because the Los Angeles larruper was trying to prove tia he was a more formidable St pound contender than unbeaten Young Ray Robinson of Harlem, who won a decisive ciecision over LaMotta last October. ‘Had Wilson won last night’s bout, he would have been tossed into the Garden ring with Young Robinson on Feb. 3.

such a meeting, it virtually assured that Robinson will go into the array Jan. 28. No Knockiowns ; There were no kn ockkdowns. In the seventh LaMotia actually had Wilson groggy with his wild swings to the head. LaMotta used every= thing in his repertoire, but couldn't put Wilson down. Instead, Big Jake ran out of gas. Wilson came on to win the ninth and ‘to fight on even terms in the 10th. Meanwhile, the crowd of 9684 fans, who contributed a gate of $21,3:5, saw Chalky Wright give lightweight Joey Peralta of Tamaqua, Pa, & boxing lesson as he, too, pounded out a unanimous decision, Wright's left hook to the head and lis smashing right to the body slow:d grim-visaged Peralta: to a walk. Referee Frankie Fullam gave Pi= ralta the seventh round on a foul because of Wright's low blows. But Wright won going a a way.

Caps Face Pittsburg

Pittsburgh will have anoth:r chance tonight to turn back He's

when the two hockey teams, hold ers of third and second places, rim spectively, in the western. divisions, clash at Pittsburgh. The Hornets have been unable io turn the trick all season and have been on the receiving end of somes bad beatings at the hands of the Caps. So far, the teams have met four times’ and the best Pittsburg could salvage out of thie series was a 1-1 tie, Dec. 27 on the Coliseura ice. Other games played, all in the Caps’ favor, were 3-1, 7-2, and 5-1. Tomorrow night ‘he Caps will play first-place Buffalo and Wednsday night will :ravel to Prov idence. ‘A match with Hershe;r next ‘Saturday will wind up tho road trip. ais

Bowling Scores Last night's leading bowlers were:

Dugdale, Fox-Hunt ..... Veasarereeis v 68 Carl Schaffer, Dawn .......... « 86GT L Young, Industrial .' ravenna 08 Voelz, Fox-Hunt Classic evaves S67 a Jr., Construction. .. 60% Clarence Parsons, LinkeRalt . . Kiesel, Fox-Hunt Classic John ‘Noone, Bankers ee vss Noble Albright, Speedway was Les Brandt, Construction 6 F. Schleimer, Fox-Hunt ......... esse B63 Wheeler, Fox-Hunt Classis Behrens, Construction = Lightle, Friday "Nighi Handicap Striebeck, Fox-Hunt Fiber Fox-Hunt Classic Fehr, Fox-Hunt Classic Nordholt, Fox-Hunt ....... avens Williamson, Construction Construction ....

difficulties by moving nearer to|Dobbins,

home, The Boston Red Sox, Cleveland Indians and both St. Louis clubs— the world champion Cardinals and Browns—were yet to announce new locations.

She's a WAVE

-| Bob S§

ps Russ Oberlee, Bankers Glesing, Sna -on-Tools . struction

Wood, Fox-Hunt Classic Ted Rowe, Construction John Gerlach, Insurance Associates. . Al Lamb, Sy. Joan, oo Arc Hr sacmichel, East End Dairi h Peck, son A. Earl Robinson, Prest-O-Lite .. 0 i1.0l LADIES 3 Bertha Urbancic, Kernel © Bit a Sheehan, Kernel "op Junker, Kernel O Dorel Berkopes, rie Optical Kernel 0 Optical ... ... Kernel optieal

wr oh Ca

[Open Till 10:

Daily and Al AR D: Largest Stock

upsets that ever swept Mad: jon Wilson, the choct late soldier om : decision to middleweight Jake l.a-

the co-feature 10-1oungder, dropped the duke to ancient. Chalky Wriitht ;

weight champ, whom Peralta lad, :

Wilson was a 4-1 favorite over his Wile

But his defeat not only canceled Y

bie Lewis and his Inclianapolis Cars :