THE REGISTER. GUARD, EUGENE, OREGON
Page Nine
MiNTO
0 HERE FOR
lEXiili
TaGUE STANDINGS
LfE tEGUE w. L. Pot.
.7 4 .637
.600
.555
.546
.400
.273
Lere the teams play
K. .t Toledo.
Cj ,t Albany.
rae Town team is slated to
to'?:. 0T0 on the Uni-
l' t,re7",;is the second tilt
diamond. It s t"
having won the first in
:ne n
act, 3 to
lli,hnnrl will
start
kaec w- .. .:
nii Jobn Tor slated to
At roe'rms r,
,d Bill Sajrlea to aid Bed
Uh the mound work and one
.1 ;n .tnrt Sunday. Dick
EerTownie ace, will catch
t, Tisitors.
(.Ota, UViuuii fj
Edition to Bishop, Hop Gold
.v. kriuiant keystone sacs
atioa of Gordon and Koch.
re with Eusene last season,
hi, year led tho University of
, to the northwest champion
tv.t rated the best short
Lnnd pair in coast bush league
U1Dj hasn't announce!! rne
lineUPS, OUI JVUII jwiiuaui
n bind to play second base,
!. flordon is certain to start
brt. Elliott or Snyder will bold
third, with Van unyn, tiurney
ercer in the outfield.
Smith or MeCairanriuge wm
t first for Hon Gold, with
at Kcond, Gordon at short, and
kn at third. Outfielders will be
t, Schaflely and either Smith
Itman.
oit batting averages:
AB H ret.
( 4 2 .500
17 8
20 8
.471
,400
2 , .400
9 .360
5
...18 6 .333
...40 13 .32.r
...1!) 5 .263,
...&4 12 ,222
tmya .
J -
..17 3 .177
If) 3 .155
, 0 2(1 4 .154
33 5 .151
i 10 1 .100
nan . 5 0 .000
-t-... . 8 0 .000
...1 0 .000
316 SI .250
above averages Include all ei
i luaes as well as Oregon
Uirae games.
additional attraction tn H,
fc-Hop Gold baseball game at
bivtriity diamond will be offered
oooci when Frank Fnssett's
fiaUsion ball club, champions
ftritt 3, battle the Cottage
team of the Cascnde league.
! Jtu these clubs split a series,
it week the Legion ball players
9 to 8 practice mime. Thim (a
M swamped all opposition in
K the district title, and will be
Minding threat for the state
lau will nrobablv he Hip
bportunitr of Eugene fans to
FlSSetts club in ncllnn ha,,
lie playoff series is slated to be
t' a southern Oregon city.
' the absence of Burke Aus
' lecond basemnn. h,. 1. f
P "He injury, the Legion, out
Ill be at nearly full strength.
aiiraey or Russell will k.
pound against (he iv.n..
. who are only a little older
average thnn the youngsters.
K GIRLS STANDINGS
I'ct.
1.000
.750
.500
.250
.000
'(nurd
was
"nii bntf r .v. .
hrv.i,. I "c "cgibter-
"' Hike ,!. -ir), ,
""Way nirhi ;,i, "
Cr th, Moii;;n:,M: "s"ns
"eiister-nunnl ,...
""hr ni-ki t, !.... '
S'" w,h Tlmmp.nn.. The
7'""t meet. m M..r.,
ijht. ' """"'
V and !.!.,. ...
pH " will be
8 fed
Contett
1WIB0F
-imoop
ugene Townies To Meet
Ughclimber
11 7JiJiioDer
By U1CHAUU JOHNSTON
Well, this Is the middle of July, the
weather is nigh to 90, and evidently
the sports world doesn't care what
happens between here and there, be
cause a casual survey of current
sports records reveals only tho fol
lowing: -
Tha bad boys of baseball, the
St. Louis Cards, have apparently
decided to win some ball games In
between their Inter-olub scraps.
And how they ean blast ever their
opponents when It really counts!
Gotham will be luoky to get one
olub In tho world series, because
. the Tigers are ust about even
with tho Yanks at this writing. . .
Critics are hailing Donald Budge,
flaming hnired youth from southern
California' courts, as the hope of
the American Davis Cup team, at
this moment engaged in trying to
shore the Germans out of the finals
with England and its Fred Perry.
Budge is easily the outstanding tennis
sensation of the year, and if he keeps
it up he should lead the U. S. on to
greater things next year. His strok
ing is masterful and smart, and be
may spring an upset this year. . . .
,11-7
SAN FRANCISCO, July 20 OP)
San Francisco's Seals pounded out an
11 to 7 win over Portland today in a
dull gome marked chiefly by Joe Dira
ngcio, Seals outfielder, hitting safely
in his 25th consecutive contest.
Score:
Portland 7 13 2
Sen Francisco 11 15 b
Ulrich, Kadonitz and Richards; Bnl
lou, Mails and Woodnll.
Saos Lick Reds
SACRAMENTO, July 20. OP)
Sacramento hung up Its third strsight
victory over the Missions here today,
winning a 4 to 3 ball game by some
superhuman effort in the final innings.
Score: .
Missions 3 8 1
Sacramento 4 9 2
Nitcholns, Stitscl nnd Outen; Kou
pal and Salkeld.
Oaks Fell Angels
OAKLAND, Cnlif., July 20 UP)
Landing on Glenn Gnbler, second
ranking pitcher in the Coast league,
for four rn;is in the seventh, 0:iklnnd
defeated Los Angeles 6 to 3 today to
take the series lead.
Seore:
Los Angeles . 8 6 - 0
Oakland 6 15 4
Galiler, Frnzier and Goebcl; Mc
Donald and Rnitnondi, Kies.
Spuds Wreck Shleks
LOS ANGELES, July 20 (P) The
Scnttle Indians massacred Hollywood
today, 15 to 2, and took the bulgo in
the scries with three ball games out
of five.
Score:
Seattle .- 15 21 1
Hollywood 2 14 1
Bryan and Duggnn. Kerr; Home, E.
Donovnn and Desnntels.
Katherine Rawls
Defends 300-Meter
Crown Saturday
NEW IORK, July 20. W) After
a terrific lightning storm drove all
but a hardy couple of hundred spec
tators to frantic, cover, Katherine
Itawls, Miami Bench youngster, suc
cessfully defended her 300-meters in
dividual medley championship today
in the women's national swimming
tourney nt Manhattan Beach.
It wns the second victory of the
four-day competition for Miss Rawls,
all-around champion among Americnn
women. Yesterday Miss Rawls de
posed Anne Gnvednik of Chisholm,
Minn., as tbe 220-yard breast-stroke
champion.
Baseball Standings
By the Associated Press
NATIONAL
W.
L.
20
30
34
41
42
45
47
64
Pet.
.71
.034
.590
.523
.475
.404
420
.247
New Tork . ,
St. Louis ...
Chicago
Pittsburgh .
Brooklyn .
Cincinnati .,
Philadelphia
Boston . . . .
....53
....50
....4!t
45
,...3N
39
....34
....21
AMERICAN
40
New York
Detroit ..
Chicago .
30
33
35
41
40
43
4S
55
.020
.f12
.tV7
.512
.500
.150
.429
.313
..44
Boston , 43
f'levelnnd
.40
Philadelphia
Washington
St. Leuis ...
...TS
..3lt
COAST
San Francisco
Missions
Seattle
Oakland
Los Angeles
Portland
..20
.025
.559
.500
.45
.455
-.441
.412
...19
...17
...17
...15
Hollywood
.15
Sncrnmento 14 20
ALL STAR FOOTBALL BALLOT
"t fflV VAta trxr. ! i 1 41..
riat Aii e, l"B '""owing men to piay on wis
e All.Stars in the charitv came with the Chi-
r'ASt29ie9350nal f00tba11 chamPions & ChU
RAYMOND "BUTCH" MORSE
9 i... All-Coast End, University of Oregon
loeen grannis
S WT All-Amerlcan Guard, 'Willamette University
HAL PANGLE
Star Quarterback, Oregon State
'oes July 21. Send or take to Oregonlan Sports
Schmeliug, at last reports, is still
shuttling between Louis and Baer.
Evidently it would be smart for the
Black Uhlan to take on Maxie, be
cause that would be the direct road
to the title. What the Garden wants
to do now is throw Louis out of the
picture before popular demand grows
too loud. A title bout with Louis
as one of the participants had better
be rim off early next year or else
Braddock can spend all his time on
de little wife and de kiddies as a de
fense of a synthetic title. . . .
Tho University of Oregon
coaching staff h scratching Its
head nowaday wondering where
tho freshman material la coming
from. Already some Oregon
tars hav announced their Inten
tion of going to California. Tho
mentors hope to get i pretty fair
assortment rounded up, how.
over. ...
No night games for university grid
fans this fall. All three games, with
Utah, Idaho, and Oregon State will
be played in broad daylight. In fact
night games on the coast have suf
fered a decline in popularity, if one
is to take the 1935 schedule as an
indication. ...
McLemore's
Sport
Parade
By HENRY McLEMORE
United Press Staff Correspondent
PRINCETON, N. J., July 20. (U.R)
After nigh on to a 'decade of
writing about sports events ranging
from women s horse-shoe pitching
to the English derby (pronounced
Klee-Ko), I finally have found my
favorite sport.
I found it here on Princeton's
maple-bordered Lake Carnegie at
the 03rd regatta of the national as
sociation of amateur oarsmen. It Is
single sculling, that delightful sport
in which a 200-pound man gets in a
10-pound boat and rows like bell.
For a reporter, covering a single
scull ace is as simple as breaking
down Huey Long's resistance to an
interview. After working the Pough
keepsic regatta. In which nine or
ten shells, fsirly teeming with men.
finish In the dark a mile awny, or
an international polo match in
which riders, horses, helmets and
mallets, appear to be a moving, con
glomerate mass, siugle sculls is sheer
delight. '
Take the race scheduled for this
afternoon, in which the American
amateur championship is to be de
cided. It is to single sculling what
the world series Is to baseball, the
Rose Bowl game to football, the
American's cup to yachting. But It
isn't oing to be complicated like
those babies are.
I shall report it from a shady spot
on the lake's edge and if I feel so
inclined I may even roll up my pants
legs and do a bit of wading while
the race is on. For It will be sim
plicity, itself. There will be no pub-lie-spirited
St. Louis citiiens there
to lay down a barrage of assorted
citrus products: no halfbacks picking
up tbe ball and running the wrong
way; no yacht skipper running op
the red-flannel drawers of protest.
All will be serene. Shnrply st three
o'clock Mr. Winthrop Rutherfurd of
Princeton, Mr. Al Vogt of Philadel
phia, and Mr. Charles Campbell of
Toronto, will step daintily Into their
little sculls, psddlc calmly to the
startiw mark, and then start rowing
down the lake.
In effect, the race will be nothing
moe than three campers stepping
Into rowbonts nnd seeing who can
each the best trout hole the quick
est. , .
Thev'll he right there before my
eyes, so close that if there's any
information I want, such as what
beat they're using, or how they feel.
I can almost call out in a chatty
tone of voice and ask them.
Yon can't imagine what comfort
this is after the usual national cham
pionship in any sport. In golf, to
get any information, yon must beot
your way past a thundering herd of
masbie-inaddened men, women and
children. In, yachting you must swim
half way to Portugal for information,
and when you get there the boat
you're after like as not has luffed
to windward in search of a vagrant
puff of wind.
Baseball Is even worse, what with
managers who show their nuiet dis
pleasure over a defeat by throwing
spiked shoes st your head and of
fering more absurd explanations than
Gerald Chapman.
Sculling offeri; none of these com
plications. If the celebrated Mr. Rip
ley is not satisfied with the life he
is leading I would advise him to
become sculling editor of some
paper.
(Copyright 1035 by
United Press)
Fassett's Nine To
Play Rose Champs
Frank Fjssetts Amerlcsn Legion
Juniors will meet the powerful Sugar
Crest nine, Portland Champio .: Tues.
day afternoon on Reinhart field, it
was announced Saturday.
The game is set for 5 o'clock. Fas
sett is planning a strenuous practice
grind next week for bis players In
preparation for the Rosebiirg aeries.
FREE
DANCING Every Evenlnf
except Wed. and Sat.
SWIMMING Every Day.
WILLAMETTE PARK
Hop Gold Nine At University Field Today
E
GIANTS LOSE TILTS
NATIONAL
CHICAGO,. July 20. OP) The
league leading New York Glanta suf
fered their fourth defeat in aix games
in the west today as the Cubs, coupl
ing a ten-hit attack off Roy Parme
lee with effective . pitching in tbe
clutches of Larry French, won their
second victory of the series, T to 2.
- R.H.E.
New York 2 12 S
Chicago. . 7 10 1
Parmelee and Mancuso; French and
Hartnett
Braves Loas Two
PITTSBURGH, July 20. OP)
The Boston Braves dropped both
games of today's doubleheadcr with
the Pirates, running their consecu
tive string of defeats to 24. The
scores were 14 to 3 and 6 to 3.
First game: It. H. E.
Boston 2 10 3
Pittsburgh 14 15 1
Frankhouse, R. Brown. Betts and
Hogan, Mueller; Brown and Padden.
Second game: R. II. E.
Boston 8 9 1
Pittsburgh B 11 1
MacFayden and Spohrer; Weaver
and Grace.
Phillies Lick Reo
CINCINNATI, July 20. OP) Off
to an early etart with four runs,
scored on three doubles and a single
off Tony Freitns, the Phillies de
feated the Reds, 0 to 3 today.
Philadelphia 14 0
Cincinnati S 0 1
Walters and Wilson: Fredas. John
son, Schott, Herrmann and Campbell.
Brooklyn at St. Louis, postponed,
rain..
AMERICAN
BOSTON, July 20. OP) The
Tigers wiped out most of the differ.
ence between first and second place
in the American lengue standing to
day as they turned back the Red Sox
for the third straight time, 6 to 5,
but tbe "law of averages" continued
to favor the Yankees.
R.H. E
Detroit 6 13 2
Boston 5 13 0
Crowder, Auker and Cochrane;
Rhodes. Walberg, W. Ferrell and R.
Ferrell.
A's Split Twin Bill
PHILADELPHIA, July 20. OP)
Behind Roy Mnhaffey's six hit pitch
ing, the Athletics enme back in the
second gome today to win 5 to 2 and
even a doubleheadcr after the Cleve
land Indians had overwhelmed, them,
15 to 3, in tbe first encounter.
First game: R. n. E.
Cleveland 15 21 0
Philadelphia 8 8 1
Lee and Phillips, Brenzcl; Dietrich,
Castor nnd Richards, Berry.
Second game: R. H. E,
Cleveland 2 6 !
Philadelphia 5 0 0
Winegarner and Phillips; Mnbaffey
and Richards.
Sox, Soloni Divide
WASHINGTON, July 20. OP)
After winning the first game of a
doublebcader, 1 to 0, as Charles
Fischer limited the Senators to a
single hit. the Chicago White Sox
dropped the second to Washington,
0 to 2.
First gome: ' R. H. E.
Chicago 1 7 1
Washington 0 1 0
Fischer and Sewell; Hadley and
Holbrook.
Second game: Tt. H. E.
Chicago 2 5 3
Washington 0 13 2
Jones. Tietje, Phelps, Wyntt and
Shea; Whitehill and Bolton.
St. Louis at New York, postponed;
rain.
Initiative Urging
Reopening Rogue
To Be Filed Soon
MARSHFIELD. Ore., July 20.
(U.R) An initiative petition will be
filed with the Secretary of State Mon
day asking the re-opening of the
Rogue river to commercial fishing be
tween March 15 and June 30 each
year, it wns learned here today.
The bill is said to be sponsored by
the Rogue River fisheries union, nnd
A. W. Hall, Jess Turner, J. C. John
son, attorney, Mrs. J. C, Johnson,
C. II. Bailey, county judge of Curry
county, and by the Ophir grange, No.
707, Fred Adams, moster, and Fannie
James, secretary,
The bill is said to have been draft
ed similar to tbe old Rogue river bill
except with reference to the season.
Besides asking the re-opening of the
river to market fishermen it will ask
for repeal of Chap. 325, Oregon laws
of 1035, passed by the last session of
the legislature which closed the rirer
to all commercial fishing.
It will be argued that such a sea
son for commercial fishing would al
low sufficient time for tbe Rome
waters to replenish for tbe best
ports fishing later In the year.
LAST DAY
if. Wallace I Kay ll
VVi . 3eery f Francis U
hl In Li Geo. LW
I Brant
West Point I Warren
of I William In
I "Living on
ATTENTION,
GRID FANS!
Football Fans! Today Is your
last chance to help put Hutch
Morse, Loren Grannis, ami Ilnl
PaiiRlo "over the top" for the
right to play la the All-Star
fame at Chicago. Voting cloes
at midnight tonight, a. unless .
your votes, mailed to th Oregon
lan, are postmarked Kfore that
time, they will not count.
At the bottom of this ptge ta
a coupon, an All-Star Ballot. Clip
the coupon, sign it and mail It! Or,
better still, paste a atrip to tho
bottom and get your friends to
aign it too! As many signatured
as you wish may be attacLed to
one coupon, and they'll all count.
Remember, the postage will be
the some for one name as for 00!
BUT TOX'T FAIL TO VOTE I
PORTLAND. Ore., July 20 UP)
Oregon football fans tonight were
staging a Inst quarter rally nncl boost
ing their "big threo" candidates up
tho scoreboard lu tlm national poll to
select an nil-star football tenm to
meet the Chicago Bears next month
in a charity game.
Practically all ballots received
here today carried the names of Butch
Morse of Oregon, Loren Grannis of
Willamettj .tud Hnl 1' angle of Oregon
State.
Butch Morse, Oregon's nil-roast end
who had a head start and was getting
votes from far-away Luoisinnn, the
bay region of California and other
parts of the nation, also held a slight
edge In voting here
Today he received 10,000 more
votes here: Grannis, the Associated
Press little nll-Aineriean guard of
Willamette university was second with
14.891, and Hal Pangle, Oregon State
blocking bark was third with 14,200.
A few "gesture" votes continued to
roll in for Norman Franklin of Oregon
State college, Alex Engle, of Univer
sity of Oregon, nnd others. However,
none received as many as 1000 votes
here today, nlthough many vites arc
being sent direct to Chicago.
Portland, now well organized In tbe
balloting, continued to lead the par-
ode today and Salem was making n
better showing in support if Grannis
and the others.
Sugar Crest Nine
Of Portland Wins
Am. Legion Series
PORTLAND, Ore., July 20 OP)
The Sugnr Crest legion junior team
won the Portland championship today,
dusting off four El Key pitchers for
12 hits and a 0 to 3 win.
By winning the best two nut of
three of the Portnnd series, Sugar
Crest won 'An Into the state plnyoff at
Wood burn August 10 and 11.
A four-ruii blast in the first Inning
wns enough to win the game, but the
Donut Dunkers kept right on fight
ing. Sugar Crest 0 12 1
El Rey 3 8 4
Shaw and Scott; Devaney, Richards,
Erlckson, Fenter and B Mention,
Campbell.
Willard Baseball
, Club Leads League
In the second contest of the Play
ground Boftbnll eague, Willard Juniors
defeated Lincoln Juniors, 21 to 0. Con
don Seniors won by default from
Skinner liutte. and Willard Seniors
defeated Lincoln, 7 to 5. In the finnl
gnmo of the series, Condon Seniors
defeated Skinner Butte, 15 to 14.
Standings to date Include:
Seniors W. L. Pet.
Fn.ncos Willard 2 O 1.000
Lincoln 1 1 .BOO
Condon 1 1 .500
Skinners Butte 0 2 .000
Juniors W. L. Pet.
Frances Willard 2 0 1.000
Lincoln 1 1 .500
Condon 1 1 .500
.Skinners Butte 0 2 .000
Theres no
beer quite
Lager beer
MELLOW from months of care
ful ageing yet delighting the
palate with that full-flavored hop
Ung jo characl eristic of Bohemian
Beers! Those who appreciate
good beer have developed such a
fondness for its dutiruftive taste
that Bohemian Club is fast
becoming known as "The Choice
of HEER Drinkers Everywhere."
ltell!till
Ohuip
ORANGE SPRINGS BOTTLING CO.
727 East Broadway Phone 3761
WITH SHOW
!x 1
Miss America of 193S, national beauty eontest winner, shown above,
will be here Monday at tha State theatre aa one of tha living models
with the big triple bill attraction which features "The Road to Ruin"
and "Sins of Love". Mlae America appears as a model In the leoture
by Prof. Francis Freeman, which
SLATED FOR LIE
Five Sunday lmll games are slated
for Lnno county.
Tbe llills-Guistlnn club of the Cjis
endo league meets Cottoge Orove nt
Swimmers' Delight while Springfield
and Mnrcola cross bats nt the former's
homo field.
The K. C.'a go to Toncnlla In the
only other lengue game.
In the Good Time loop, Spencer
Creek plays nt Belknap, and The
Ragles go to McKonzie Valley. The
Fall Creek and South Siilcrs game
wns cancelled.
Omaha Canters To
Arlington Victory
CHICAGO, July 20. WV-Sprinting
to a new track recarri, Omaha
clinched the three year old champion
ship of the Americnn turf today by
winning the $3(1,000 Arlington clnnslc
by a length and a half, with St. Ber
nard second.
Omaha, masterly ridden hy Jockey
Wayno Wright, went into the lend in
the streti-h turn, overtaking St. Ber
nard, which had led from tbe start.
Illoodroot finished third.
other
like this
mil'
pi
mm
AT STATE
I
accompanies the screen snowing.
Discovery Winner
Of Big Handicap
Event Saturday
BOSTON, July 20. (U.R) Alfred
G. Vanderbilt a handicap king, Uis
covery, one to fivo favorite in a field
of five, lowered tho mile and a fur
long record at Suffolk Downs by
more than two full seconds in gallop
ing that dlstanco In 1:51 4-5 to win
the Bunker Hill handicap and its
purse of $7,400 today.
A crowd of R5,000 wltneseed the
brilliant performance of the four-yenr-old
son of Dlsplny-Arlsdno ae
Johnny Itejshnk sent blm Into the
lend half way around to finish out the
journey more than a dosen lengths In
front of Paul A. Shaw's Gov. Sholti
in n common canter. Mack Howard's
fivo-year-old ninre, Advising Anna,
the enrly lender, wns third with L. T.
Whitehall's Gusto fourth and Percy
M. Pike's Tcrnlic bringing up the
rear.
Discovery paid $2.40 straight, $2.60
place and ?-.-' enow in the $2 mu
tual. Gov. Sholts paid $7 place nnd
$11 uliow. Advising Anna paid $2.40
snow.
Great Britain's uational debt totals
$;io,iou,CK)0,ooo.
1MB
t,JM ELEVENTH AT ALDER.
IT'S A CASE OF FUN
- tit
AND ON THE
STRANGER
STRONGER
X-J Also
Scrappy In "Happy Butterfly"
Universal-Graham MoNamee New
CWCV51 ."if ' .
If SHI-ID HE'S
IB GET
I
"I want SfcShainf With the belt,
or without (he belt in the ring or on
the street all I ask la one more crack
at that guy!"
Thor Jensen, the Elkton Orator,
speaking. The Thunderbolt has al
ways been noted for his eloquence,
and when he entered the Register
Guard office Saturday evening, he
seemed gifted with seven tongues.
McShsin might have permanently
disabled me two weks sgo," Thor con
tinued, without drawing breath. "I
was nearly unconscious when he was
putting that Boston Crab on, and
when Elliott finally woke up and gave
him the fall, what's he do but stsnd
back snd let him jump on ma! First I
want MrShnln. Then I'd like a crack
at Elliott!"
With The BeltT
He paused. It was an opportunity.
"You've been matched with XlcShain
for next Thursday night," he was in
formed. The Thunderbolt s scowling coun
tenance was wreathed in smiles.
Willi the belt up?" he asked.
The reporter took his life tn hla
hands. "No," he replied softly, get
ting ready to duck, "Mcshaln says
he doesn't consider yon a worthy op
ponent, and he'll see you in first
before he'll give you a chance at hia
belt- Ah-h-h, he even said something
about 'getting a reputation'!"
Lightning crackled. Ton conld feel
the Thunder rolling up Mr. Jensen's
spine, ready tn splinter from bis eyes
"Itepntntion!" Only -one word. But
It wns an oath, an Imprecation, a
calling down of the gods of evil.
Here's Challenne
"Llsscn!" roared the Thunderbolt,
"you go tell McShain that he can keep
his belt. Ton go tell McShaln that
I'll "choo.ie" him anytime I see him
snd that If be thinks he's so tuogb I'll
meet him at the corner of Eighth anl
Willamette at 2 o'clock Wednesday
afternoon and beat his brains out on
the sidewalk. And yon can tell him
I'll bet he's too yellow to be there!"
With that Mr. Jensen departed In
to the night. McShaln, who had been
contacted before and had mnde the)
statements above, began to get ser
iously Irked when Informed of thai
Thunderbolt's remarks.
"Jensen got what be bad coming
last time," leered the champion, "and
I don't see why T should meet him
ngnin. But Owen says rnssle him,
and I'll rnssle him. Of course I won't
put my belt up. no didn't give any
Indication he wns a worthy contender,
nnd if they're gonna meet me for tha
title, they gotta he good!
Thursday, Anyhow
"Meet Mm on a street corner? ,
Nuts! Why should I beat the day
lights out of him for the yaps around
here end get notbin' for It? If they
want to see me rnssle, they'll have to
bounce It on tbe line."
And there yon have It. Jensen
promises to be at Eighth snd Willam
ette Wedueaday, and freely predict!
Mr. McShaln won't be present. Mr.
McShnin admits be won't, but might
chnnge his mind.
And without regnrd to that part
of It, the two will meet Thursdny
night in nerb Owen's main event. It
it isn't a genuine grudge match, two
wrestlers who sre really mad can
stay away from this office!
It ba been reported from the Por
tuguese capital that Spanish treasure
to the value of $1,500,000 has been -raised
from galleons sunk in Vlg
Bay, Lisbon, In 1705.
8AME PROGRAM
than fiction I
than your Imagination!
3
starting at 12:45
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