Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 May 1943 — Page 6
PACE 6
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
be Loses To Weatherman Again; Brewers Here Tomorrow’
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MONDAY, MAY 17,
SPORTS...
By Eddie Ash
FRANKIE FRISCH has taken a cue from Branch Rickey to employ a blackboard as he operates his Pitts-
burgh Pirates. . . . However,
his face became flushed be-
tween games of a recent double-header with the St.
Louis Cardinals.
Before the first game on that particular day the blackboard
seemed like a good idea, with the on it, with notations on how to
names of the Cardinal players pitch to each so that the Buc
pitchers could look, ponder and study.
Opposite the name of George formation that the third baseman
KRurowski was chalked the inwas a dead left field hitter. .
“Pitch him tight, close inside, aim at his hands,” the blackboard
read.
But in the sixth inning, which netted the Cards six runs, Kurowski, the dead left field hitter, stepped back and pushed an ordinary fly to right, where, because they were all playing the hitter dead left field, the ball went for three bases and drove in three runs. Frisch applied an eraser to the blackboard before the second
game started.
When Indians Had No Market Value
ROBERT G
(BOB) ALLEN, aged 75, who died in Little Rock,
Ark. last Friday night, managed the Indianapolis ball club in 1898
and 1899. . . . ¢ At the close of the
99 season, the club having lost
money, John T. Brush, owner, begged Allen to take the club and
franchise “for free.” . . = But Allen Cincinnati team and accepted it league club owner
received an offer to manage the rather than become a minor
. . » When Allen piloted the Indianapolis team the
city was in the Western league and the park was not far from the
mile square on the near East side. Allen's 1890 Cincy Reds finishe after the one season in the Queen
= = =
a seventh and he was unseated City.
RECENTLY discharged from the coast guard, Bob Dill. out-
fielder, signed with the Minneapolis Millers, .
Northern league. . .
. « He is out of the
. Dill also is a professional hockey player and
performed with the Buffalo Bisons the early part of the 1942-43
season.
Indoor-Outdoor Rink Goes to
War
ST. PAUL'S famed indocr-outdoor ice skating rink is closed for the duration. . , . Known as the Hippodrome, it furnished skating under a roof and on natural ice.
Although the rink hasn't had
artificial ice and has been de-
i ———
Indians Divide
Double-Header With the Blues
By EDDIE ASH
The fourth and final game with the Kansas City Blues, scheduled at, Victory field tonight, has been washed out, Secretary Al Schiensker of the Indianapolis baseball club, said today. The third-place Milwaukee Brewers will be in town tomor-| row. | Following vesterday's double- | header, the Indians still are out in| front in the A. A. race, but they can § feel the hot breath of three clubs on the back of their necks. It's that close. N After making themselves look like | © champions in the first half of yester- | day's double-header, winning, 5 to 0, behind Earl Reid's three-hit pitch- §& ing, the Indians did an about-face in the seven-inning second game W§ and Kansas City drubbed them, 14 to 1. And the Tribesters were held to two hits. one a scratch, by Glenn | © Hausmann and Floyd Bevens. Hausmann worked a blister on a \ finger and was relieved by Floyd |™ | Bevens after pitching to one man in 3 {the seventh. » The first encounter delighted the ° crowd of 6055 of which 5545 was ga paid. Servicemen and others swelled \ /the attendance over the 6000 mark. Reid received swell support and’ four Tribe double plays helped goose-egg the league's defending champions. After Melosevich's |double in the first inning the Blues did not get another blow until the § sixth and their third and last was | made in the seventh. AW The Indians scored in the opening {\ |stanza on Blackburn's single, a walk {to English and Haslin's single. They staged a three-run rally in the third on a triple by Pike, walks to Eng[lish and Morgan, Hofferth’s long §§ fly, a walk to Vaughn and Fairly's § | single. Vaughn Busy at Second
The Tribe's fifth and last run In ‘the first tilt was registered in the fifth on Morgan's triple and Haslin’s long fiy. Melvin Queen, Kansas City hurler, retired after the fifth
NN 3
i |
When Don Pedlow of Tech
Bracks 26¥a0:-Olc: Ma
Miller Pitches P. R. Mallory To 1-0 Victory
. The Manufacturers’ league of the k | Indianapolis Amateur Baseball association remained in a three-way tie for first place today but there was a new face at the top of the loop standings and one of last week's leaders fell to the 500 mark. P. R. Mallory, behind the four-hit pitching of ex-Butler star Harold Miller, handed Allison's nine its first defeat of the season yesterday, 1-0, and joined Lukas-Hatold and Stewart-Warner at the top of the heap. The latter two teams were rained out in their games with Cur-tiss-Wright and E. C. Atkins, Yespectively. Bach has one victory against no defeats. The KinganU. S. Rubber tilt also was washed out.
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Win Third Straight
Other association games saw Pure Oil win its third straight contest in the Municipal league, walloping Ft. Harrison, 16-9, while Eagles 211 walked. over the Allison Red Wings, 10-2, in another Municipal loop game. The Edgewood Merchants nosed out Armour, 5-4, and the Southport Merchants whipped the| 40 & 8 team, 3-1, in two Big Six| league games, Miller, keeping the four hits Allison nicked him for well scattered, scored the winning run in the eighth inning after he had tripled to open the frame. He crossed the plate when Shortstop Bill Layton dropped a Texas leaguer over the reads of the Allison infielders.
Gets 4 for §
The Pure Oilers victory over Ft.| Harrison was led by LeRoy Compton and Eldred Birge who collected | three hits each. Tiger, Ft. Harri- | son catcher, grabbed individual hon- | | ors, however, by pounding out four | | safeties in five trips to the plate. | | Eagles had liitle trouble with the | Red Wings, smacking Allison pitch- | |ers for 16 bingles and holding the] losers to five. Paul Bowman of the| Eagles had a perfect day at bat. Edgewood’s victory was its second in the Big Six league, but it took
broke the 26-year-old high jump
Jack-Montgomery Scrap Tops Bill
NEW YORK, May 17 (U, P.).— Boxing returns to Madison Square Garden after an abgence of seven weeks with the Beau Jack-Bob Montgomery lightweight title bout Friday night, which features this week's lengthy national ring program. Jack, making his first defense of the 135-pound diadem, rules a 12-5 betting choice to whip the talented Philadelphia Negro. The battle is oxpecped to draw a gate of more than $80,000. Other important bouts will find Jackie Callura, N. B. A, featherweight choice. In a non-title contest and two ex-featherweight champions, Chalky Wright and Pittsburgh Jackie Wilson, in action. Heavyweight Lou Nova hits the comeback trail at Portland, Ore.
Garner Trains. .
In Windy City
Bob Garner, the hard-hitting Louisville youngster who meets Johnny Denson, Indianapolis heavye weight product, in the ten-round main event of a pro boxing bill to be staged at the Armory Friday night by the Hercules Athletic club, will train for the battle at Chicago, The Kentuckian already is in the Windy City and will go through ine tensive paces at Danny Spunt's Ringside gymnasium, After battling to a draw with Denson in an eight-rounder last February, the Louisville comer wad : given a sound trouncing by Denson in a return match early last month, During the milling a terriffic body punch by the local battler fractured three of Garner's ribs and the late ter will be gunning for revenge Frie day night. Y
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11 innings to accomplish the win. The Merchants were forced to match a three-run splurge by Ar-| mour In the last of tne 10th before | pushing across the deciding run in| the 11th frame,
Breaks 1-1 Deadlock
Southport broke a 1-1 deadlock in| the ninth inning with the 40 & 8. nine, scoring two runs on Benny | Kauffman’s triple, a base on balls and two singles. The Gold Medal Beers-DeWolf News tilt in the Municipal league was postponed.
DePauw Takes.
MAROTT CHALLENGERS
They bear our name and our endorsement as “the best buy in town.”
WHEN Al Zarilla of Toledo homered in the first inning agaidist Columbus last Wednesday it was only the second home run of the new season for the whole four eastern American association teams. . . . And, the other home run was belted by—2Zarilla against Indianapolis on May 5. . . . In other words one player hit home runs for four teams in two weeks.
ndar
‘lay by Fairly
Fairly booted a grounder in the sixth and it developed into a run. INDIANAPOLIS (First Game) Columbus Milwaukee Kansas City Minneapolis Toledo Louisville St, Paul
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Brookiyn Boston St. Louis Pittsburgh New York Cincinnati Philadelphia Lnicage
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(Second Game)
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Pet. New York 636 | Llevelana Washington St. Louis Detroit . Philadelphia CUhicage .
Boston
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land young Frank Tincup went in| | Louisville vitcher. | mark of 5 feet 11 inches he made in 1917. Pedlow bested that [12 chances without a bobble, six | double plays. "he the Tech Oval Saturd ine Meet at Tech Oval Saturday | fracas moved ” 8 2 = » I am By DICK WYATT |tipoff that Woodie Rich was facing player, who was the first from organized baseball to be killed in | | championships to be held Saturday at Tech high school’s athletic plant. struck by a pitched ball, Lyons, trac AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Pet. ! 331 | Broskivn ? in the seventh and last inning by 383 | Unieago 100 010 Wo— * 7 0 Manager Bush forced Rich “to | Newsom and Moore. inning. It was the first time this 39 Cincinnati ...... ,... 000 000 100— 1 & © A3| potand. and games being lost by a one-run Boston 003 001 OOx— i " 9 pSSer = mitted Rich to “take it” as a warn(First Game) i h X pitchers who like to dilly-dally until
| record last Friday at the East side field, Harry Hull, left, of NoblesFe EO oe mois foriner | ville was on hand to offer his congratulations. Hull held the old { y Fred Vaughn, ‘Tribe second sacker, | with a leap of 6 feet 13 inches. had a busy first game. He accepted] TT no | % » ! ® 'putouts and six assists, and he was F I w } H S A A {in the middle on the Indians’ four Qvor . ayne In . » * ’ » | The second game was |the fans prefer to forget. into the fifth, the CITIZENS of Stock i | Indians were leading, 1 to 0. The NS o ockton, Cal, are conducting a drive to erect a Mn i i h Si y rorite to retain memorial to Billy Hebert, i w iven when he! North Side of Ft. Wayne probably will rule a heavy favor : *, lormer Pioneer sid muiiug league Po ils first up Supremacy in the 40th annual Indiana state high school track and field i in the fifth. Scharein sacrificed, © Seumn, . + « Fe met 1s death 51 Guanaleansl, ie vion tripled, Saltzgaver was] Coach Rolla Chamber's Redskins marked up their 40th consecutive ] k victory over the week-end by winning the Ft. Wayne sectional. 'doubled and a poor throw on re-| The triumph assured Chambers of a nine-man squad, in addition to a S C a a 1 e his mile relay team, when the Red- | l 33% | Unieago 345] Warneke and Todd; Head and Owen. |scoring nine runs on eight hits, 3331 (Second Game) {three walks and an error. ‘212 B kiy Sm { SE et West and Pind Tedd: Higve | Suffer it out.” Fourteen Blues went m |to pat during that huge nine-run et. | 696 | 3 | Uris: Game) season that the Indians received a 33} | Boston 930 000 0ox— 3 4 1/sound trouncing, the three other 435! Walters and Mueller; 430 | | margin. SIS! Lineinnan It's a safe guess that Bush perShoun, Stone, Heusser and De Phillips, Lakeman: Tobin and Masi. ing to get in shape “or else.” This is too tough a season to wait on 3 June hefore they are ready.
Pittsburgh New York Butcher Lombardi.
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1 {New York 001 000 000— 1 2 (First Game) O00— 2 8 2 Scharein, ss
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GAMES TODAY
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION (All Games at Night) Kansas City at INDIANAPOLIS (8:30). Milwaukee at Louisville. Minneapolis at Columbus. St. Paul at Toledo.
Tribe Box Scores
(First Game)
AMERICAN LEAGUE KANSAS CITY
|
Boston Uhicage | Newsome, Dobson and | Maltzberger and Tresh i (Second Game) Boston ...... vhruLsh U0 B11 Pe 4 10 1 | Chicage LL | Lucier and Partee; Hum and Turner,
Klinger and Lopez; Trinkle, Adams and 109 pol 00 BOx— & 9 0 Milosevich, 2b
| Mancuso. Peacock; Dietrich, Landrum, If | Lyo!
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Cincinnati at New Yerk. St. Louis at Brookl (twilight). Chicage at Philadelphia. Only games scheduled.
| jicLecd, 3b Ye immerman "enh 100 100 2 9 1] shelley 3 mphties, Bagne |Geney” pF
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AMERICAN LEAGUE New York at Detroit. Bosten at Cleveland. Washington at St. Louis. Only games scheduled.
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{New York 108 110 010— ST 11 © | St. Louis 920 100— 3 9 4 Chandler and Hemsley; Hollingsworth, | Potter, McKain and Hayes. | (Second Game; 19 Innings) 2 > 110 000 010 0— 8 9 1 St, Louis 800 200 810 1— & 3 © Blackburn, If _ Donald, Murphy and Dickey; Niggeling, | Pike, cf Caster and Ferrell. English, rf
2 0 3 2 Queen in sixth. incup in ninth and
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Totals Korte batted for Dews batted for
ia———— walked. RESULTS YESTERDAY INDIANAPOLIS AMERICAN ASSOCIATION (First Game) WZ ON 310— 6 13 1] Louisville 101 WL 200— 5 18 | Erickson, Sproull and Helf;: Woods Berry, Deutsch, Schupp and Campbell. (Second Game; 7 Innings; Agreement) Milwaukee . L101 WO — 2 8% poutsville ............ S00 O04 x— 4 3 Livengood and Pruett; Brown, Schupp | and Millies, | PRuadeiphia | Lieyeland | Black and Wagner;
t o10 000 8 110 5 er, Poat, Ba Columbus 310 000 10x— 6 11 2}
Horton, Bain, Mosely, Rudolph and | Blazo, Burkhart, Creel and Heath. Washington 9 cus go eg a TR oy City. 3, Indisnapols 5.
(Second Game: 7 Innings: Agreement) | Detroit 000 uo | bases—Kansas Minneapolis an dnd Zan Trucks, Gorsica, Hen- pace on balls—Of Queen 5, Re Lolumbus | . cup 1. Struck out—By Queen 7, Reid 2, Tincup 2. Hits—Off Queen, 6 in 5 innings; 1 in 3 innings. Losing pitcher—
Clark and Blaze: (Second Game) 301 002 04010 1 | Tineup, Sain. nei Spites—Snyder and Oppegard.
| Queen. | Time—1: (Second Game) KANSAS CITY
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Milwaukee
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. (First Game) | Philadelphia 102 910 100— § 9 | Cleveland 002 000 001— 3 10 1! Flores, Wolff and Swift; Milnar, Calvert Reid, p ol 3nd Desautels, Rosar, (Second Game) Y—
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Totals 2 & 0 Kansas City 11x— 3 35 ¢ Indianapolis Kennedy, Heving,| Runs batted in—Haslin 2, Hofferth, gby and Desautels, Rosar.| Fairly 2. wo-base hit—Milosevich. Three-base hits—Fairly, Pike, Morgan. Double plays—Fairly to Vaughn to Morgan’ | 12), Haslin to Vaughn to Morgan (2), Tin0
Minneapolis (First Game)
1 101 OV 1— 3 5 1) Barrett, Deckman and | | washington | Detroit - 000 006 000— 6 11 4 | Carrasquel, Candini and Giuliani, Early; 39 y | Overmire, White and Parsons, Richards.
000— 1 Toledo oo 2ox— 6 11 0 Bowman, Nitcholas and Andrews; Sein- | i LaCrosse Champ Scharein, so
soth and Hayworth. (Second Game; 7 Innings: Agreement) | Saltzgave GREENWICH, Conn., May 17 (U. Zimmermal o: White. | P.) —Top honors in the annual na- | X tional tournament of the U. ¥ Women’s LaCrosse association belonged to Philadelphia's undefeated st. Leuis 48 3 team today. The Phils defeated rRiisuepaty Rowe and Live | NEY York and Westchester Saturaaa: snd Glpe, Sd day and the Etceteras, 12-2, yes(Second Game)
(First Game)
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NATIONAL LEAGUE {First Game; 11 Innings)
St. Louis Philadelphia Gumbert, Dickson and Cooper; Gerbeauser and Padden.
WRESTLING
Armory—Tues., May 18,
World's so P, A shi o ca t Champion WILD BILL
LONGSON
Champion vs, Challenger ALBERT
Garden Official Dies
NEW YORK, May 17 (U. P).—|F Funeral arrangements were being|™' planned today for Harold J. Dibblee, vice president and head of the booking department of Madison Square Garden. Dibblee, 57, died of a heart ailment yesterday, He had been in. poor health for the past year, Diamonds, Watches and Jewelry
fAamee CE TE Rl LLANE | Lda.
Kansas City Indianapolis Runs batted in—Milosevich, cleod ndrum, -base t n on
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After which the Blues poured it on |
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'skins go after their third successive | Indiana interscholastic title at Tech. Two of the Ft. Wayne cinder aces | turned in double wins. Ashley Hawk won in the mile and half-mile runs and Freeman Longardner won both hurdle events. Both of these boys will bear watching in the finals and will probably rule heavy favorites to win these events. Another outstanding thinly clad from the Ft. Wayne meet that will demand respect is Max Ramsey of Ft. Wayne Central in the dashes. Ramsey registered victories in both of these events in the sectional.
Send Eight Men With their winning margain com-
whird-place wins than first, Bloomington high’s Panthers will bring an eight-man representation to the finals. University high, their city rival, will send five. The Panthers captured their own sectional after
a close battle with University, by rolling up 451% points. Probably the most outstanding, miler to come to the state finals will be Terre Haute's Jack Corridan. The Terre Haute star coasted to a victory in the Western Indiana meet by turning the mile in 4:38.1. Corridan was hampered by a wet track in Saturday's meet. The Red Streak ace was clocked earlier in the week at 4:20.7 for a new alltime city record. Wiley qualified a squad of 11 men in winning its sectional With a total of 681% points. New Albany's Bulldogs, for the 13th consecutive year, annexed the sectional cinder crown held in the southern Indiana city. The Bulldogs amassed a total of 46 points
nland qualified nine men for the
state. Leads Salem Team
Herbert Packwood, state high hurdle king, led Salem to the runner-up spot in the New Albany derby. Packwood turned in the best mark of the meet when he skimmed over the high sticks in :15.3 to win the right to defend his title in the state meet. Richmond won its own sectional for the second straight year. The eastern Indiana school placed eight men and its mile relay team in the state finals, with Morton Memorial, runner-up, qualifying four men in additional to its half-mile team. Rushville’s James Self comes out of the Richmond sector with a good chance of upsetting Jack Corridan of Terre Haute Wiley in the mile ruan. The Lion miler ran the distance in 4:434 on a soggy track. Goshen, winner of the Elkhart
4 | sectional, qualified its mile relay ied team and nine contenders for the in,
ey n
individual events at the state finals. Elkhart, who was nosed out by Goshen to lose its first sectional in the 20-year history of the meet,
the state classic. Antonini’s
mile team for
: |Gary Saturday was called off due ing by registering more second and
qualified eight boys and its half- H
amounted to four runs. ‘scored in every event except the mile relay, in which they had no entries, and won six of the 11 individual events in addition to the half-mile relay. The Bear Cats qualified seven men for the finals and Muncie Burris six. A driving rain and o cold wind that blew up the track made good marks scarce, but Harold Salyers of Burris equaled a nine-year-old sectional record when he ran the 440-yard dash in :52.2. Hammond won the East Chicago sectional, placing eight boys and both relay teams in the state finals. 4 ; ok Hammond scored 55'% points to win |the fact they even were able to stay
the title, i The sectional meet scheduled at|in the stadium is admirable. el schedu’®d 8% DePauw's strength down the line
to weather conditions and will be in all events and particular power run off today. in the field events, proved too much list of the sectional | fOr the other seven contenders, and
Here is a char sions. Wish whe itlis [ the Tigers’ 51 points almost doubled | p Gary titlist| © 0 ‘ogi, total scored by second. |
yet to be named: Anderson, Bloom- t ington, Hammond High, Goshen, piace 1Hdiang State. | North Side, Indianapolis Tech, In- B dianapolis Washington, Lafayette Ball State, 18; Butler, 16; Earl-| Jefferson, Mishawaka, Muncie Cen- hain a Hanover, tied at 15; Wa- | tral, New Albany, Richmond, Terre ash, 3
Haute Wiley and Evansville Central.| GREENCASTLE, Ind., May 17 (U. |
: P) —Depauv university today held Allison Patrol Whips Kingan’s
after winning both the singles and | doubles championships in the finals Allison Patrol, defending city and county softball champs, got off to a
here Saturday. DePauw's big gun was Erwin Schulze of Chicago, who took the flying-start at Softball stadium last night when they ushered in the 1943 season with an 8-to-0 victory over
singles crown by defeating his teammate, Merle Gulick of New Rochelle, N. Y., 7-5, 4-6, 6-2. Schulze also had a hand in the the Kingan A. A. Logan Kinnett and Hal Mahaney, Allison mound stars, combined to hurl a no-hitter for the victors as Watson, steller
doubles victory, teaming with Dick Fillbrandt of ‘St. Joseph Mich, to keystone sacker for the winners, led a 14-hit attack at the plate with two
trim Indiana university's Reed and Manis by straight set victories, 6-4, triples and a double to drive in five runs.
6-1, 6-2. The doubles win was particularly The Curtiss-Wright Girls downed R. C. Cola Girls, 12 to 0, in the first
gratifying to the Tigers because Reed and Manis had stepped into tilt of the bargain bill, with the game being called at the end of four
the finals by eliminating defending innings by agreement.
champions Gulick and Winkler of DePauw, After DePauw in the team standings came Indiana, Evansville college and Ball State, The game between the Marion Victory Girls and the Pepsi-Cola Girls was washed out yesterday at Speedway stadium, as was a tilt between the Oshom Midwest of Marion and the Curtiss-Wright men. League play at the stadium will get under way following an exhibition card at the field next Sunday. The two teams which were washed out yesterday will be matched with two other opponents Sunday.
Tribe Batting
G AB Moore 8 34
English CRs ra 11 Sara 11 5
Two Crowns
GREENCASTLE, Ind, May 17 (U.] P.) .—Butler university's six-year reign as Little State track king was finished today after the Bulldogs dropped to fourth place in the annual meet, won by DePauw's undefeated powerhouse. Indiana State and Ball State both finished ahead of Butler, but when it is considered that Butler | has no coach, has had no meets and had no track on which to practice,
Bill Longson Returns to Mat |
Wrestling’s “big guns” will supply the action at the Armory tomorrow night, where one of the best heavyweight cards staged here in a long time has been arranged. After an. absence of several months, “Wild Bill” Longson, heavyweight champ out of Salt Lake City, will be here to clash with Albert Mills, aggressive Montreal matman. Both feature a “give and take” style. Longson'’s title is on the block. Jumping Joe Savoldi, is in semiwindup action against George (Powerhouse) Pavich of Toronto. It is Joe's first visit here in more than a year. Dorve Reche opposes Bad Boy Brown of Joplin, Mo, in the 8:30 opener. Roche is from Decatur, IIL
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The Longson-Mills tussle fol-|
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