Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 28, 1940, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD- OREGON1. SUNDAY. .IULY 28. 1940.
Challedon Captures Hollywood Classic by Length, Specify Second
CHAMPION'S RUSH'EUGENE JUNIORS IDOUBLE WIN OVERIMULCAHY WINNER IKOVACS BOWS TO MEDAL HONORS INiWFRBFR FINALLY ICLINGMAN FACES
AT FINISH NETS
Can't Wait Third Victor
Tod Money Winner in
American Racing.
Los Angeles, CI., July 27,
OP) Challedon won the $50,
000 added Hollywood (old cup
mile and a quarter handicap
today. Specify wai aecond, Can't
Wait third.
The time wai 2:02, a track
record. Joy Boy finished fourth.
The pari-mutuel pay-off on
Challendon wat $7.40 win, $4.40
place, $3.40 ihow; on Specify
$10.80 place, $5.20 ihow; on
Can't Wait, $3.40 (how. Chal
ledon, top money winner in
American racing, held hit tri
umph effort until the stretch
and easily captured California's
summer turf classic In true
thoroughbred style by length
nd a quarter.
The mighty Challendon, rid
den by Georgia Woolf, who was
scoring his third straight tri
umph In this summer time
classic of the western turf, stay
ed off the pace until he hit
the stretch. Then he closed
ground with a champion's rush
to lead the speedy Specify un
der the wire by one length and
a quarter.
Pride and Joy of owner W.
L. Brann, Challendon reached
California soil for the first time
only last Monday after running
third In the Massachusetts hand
leap. He left little to the imag
inatlon as he began his victory
spurt on the far turn of the
mile and one-quarter event.
Then running eighth to the
burning pace of Specify, Hys
terical and Joyboy, the red and
gold bars of the Brann silks
closed the gap, and as Specify
made one final charge at him,
eased away to win handily.
He was timed in two min
utes, two seconds to break the
track record hung up In the
cup race a year ago by Kayak
II at two minutes, 2 3-5 sec
onds. Victory to Challedon, winner
of the Preakness and outstand
ing three-year-old of 1939.
brought sportsman Brann $36,
200 in added money and boosted
the burnished brown candi
date's winnings to $294,635.
Challedon paid his betting ad
mirers $7.40, $4.40 and $3.40.
Specify paid $10.80 and $5.20
and Can't Wait $3.40 to show
Specify was coupled with Vain
Bu in the parlmutuel betting.
Arlington Winner
Chicago, July 27. (IP)
Swain, a grey roan son of the
famous Ladysman, duplicated
the achievement of his sire to
day by galloping to a five
length victory in the $48,565 Ar
lington futurity before a crowd
of 30.000.
Ladysman won the first run
ning of the futurity In 1932,
Getting away last in a field
of 12, Swain circled the entire
field and shot out of fifth place
in the stretch to collar Valdlna
Groom and Whlrlaway.
The winner sprinted the six
furlongs over a muddy track
In 1:13 4-5, with Jockey Johnny
Adams on his back.
OUT SALEM, B TO 5
Vancouver, B. C, July 27.
(CP) Vancouver Capllanos cap
italized on two walks and an
error today to score three runs
in the ninth Inning and come
from behind to beat the Salem
Senators 8-5 in the first game
of a Western International Base
ball league doubleheader here
The second game will be played
tonight.
The Caps went to oat in the
ninth with the Senators leading
8-3. Lloyd doubled, and Don
Osborne and Sammy Samham
mer walkrd and then Ray Orteg
singled. The clout proved good
for throe rum when Coscarart
Salem left fielder, made an
error in picking up the ball.
The score: R. 11. E.
Salem 5 14 1
Vancouver . 8 10 0
Oliver and Williams; Osborne
and Lloyd.
Marble-Palfrey Win
Sea Bright, N. J., July 27 a)
Fighting from behind through
the early stages of the match,
Alice Marble and Sarah Palfrey
rallied their forces today to de
feat Callfornlans Mary Arnold
and Dorothy May Bundy for the
Sea Bright invitation women's
doubles championship, 5 7, 84
7-5.
Dm auu itiouue ul ada,
TWICE, WIN TITLE
Eugene's American Legion
Junior baseball team won the
championship of districts 3 and
4 last night at the fairgrounds
park by taking a 5 to 4, eight
inning decision from the Med
ford Juniors, after beating the
locals, 17 to 9, in the first game
of their best two-out-of-three
series at the high school park
in the afternoon.
After Medford tied the score
in the seventh with a two-run
rally, to send the game into ex
tra innings, the visitors punched
across the winning run in the
eighth. Herbert walked, went
to second on sacrifice and
came home on Branner's single
to right.
Bill Reed worked the entire
game for Medford and allowed
five hits and fanned seven.
Kirk, lanky Eugene southpaw,
gave up nine hits and struck
out five.
Eugene got away to a two-run
lead in the first inning when
Reed lost control and walked
three men in a row. Jandreau
booted Ramont's grounder and
two men scored.
The local Juniors got one of
those runs back In their half
of the first frame when Don
Fawcett reached first on an
error, went to second as Jack
Swaryck drew a base on balls.
and tallied on Cato Wray's
single.
Harold Fawcett's single to
center in the third inning gave
the Medford Juniors the tying
run, his blow driving across
Brother Don, who had got life
on an error and gone to second
on Swaryck walk.
Eugene broke the 2-2 tie in
the fifth. Fasset opened with
a walk and went to third on
Faubion's single. Blilie lofted
a fly to center field and Fasset
tallied after the catch.
The Medfo'd Juniors had an
excellent chance to tie the score
when they loaded the bases
in the sixth Inning, but with
two out Marion Hardy became
trapped off second base and
Adams was thrown out at the
piate trying to score on the
play.
Eugene scored Its fourth run
in the seventh inning on Fau
bion's hit batsman, his steal of
second, a wild pitch and Blilie's
lexas league single into right
field. Blilie was out at second
trying to stretch the blow into
double.
Fighting back in a last-ditch.
seventh and final-Inning rally,
the locals deadlocked the score
on Charlie Jandreau's double
against the left field wall, scor
ing swaryck and H. Fawcett.
who had singled. Jandreau was
out at third trying to stretch the
hit.
Don and Harold Fawcett got
two hits apiece for Medford,
while Eugene's hits were scat
tered among all players.
Score: R. H. E.
Eugene ..... 8 8 5
Medford . 4 9 1
Kirk and Northam; Reed and
Adams.
Eugana Wins First.
In the first game of the
series, played at the high school
field In the afternoon, Eugene
pounded out a 17 to 9 victory
by shelling Cato Wray and Cap
Vandergrift, Medford hurlers,
for 11 solid blows.
The local Juniors got away
to a 2 to 0 lead in the second
inning on Wray's double to left.
Adams' walk, a double steal
and a wild pitch, but the Eu
gene Juniors tallied five runs
in the third to take a lead they
never relinquished.
In this inning the visitors
clubbed Wray off the mound.
After two bases on balls, a sin
gle and a double drove in two
runs, an iniieia oui scored an- on the Pacific coast will partici
other, three-bagger chased 1 pate In the rodeo to be held at
another over the plate and a. the fairgrounds park August 17
wild pitch by Vandergrift. who and 18, it was announced yes
relieved Wray, accounted for terday.
,h" '"th r"n- The stock, Including Brahma
The locals got another run bulls and Mexican steers, will
In their half of the third on! be the same as that seen at the
Wray's single, and In the eighth 'famous Salinas. Cal.. and Pen
Charlie Jandreau belted a longjdlrtnn rodeos, and to take care
homer with two aboard. of the huge crowds expected
Harold Fawcett, with three for the two-day show arrange
hits, led the Medford attack ments will he m.H- 1,1
while Jandreau got a single nl
aanition to his round-tripper.
Score: R. H. E.
Eugene 17 12 8
Medford 9 11 2
Herbert. Ellen and Fabian:
Wray. Vandergrift, Wray and
Adams.
Portland Juniors Tie
Portland, July 27. iP) Thi
Elks tied Postofflce Pharmar
for the Portland Junior Legion
baseball title yeatrrday by whi
ping Oregon Maroronl, 16 (.
while the Pharmacy club lost ti
Frostkist, 5 8.
A'S GIVES TIGERS
LEAD
OF 2 GAMES
Detroit, July 27. P) The
Philadelphia Athletics, tough
customers all season for the Tig
ers, succumbed twice under big
bombardments from the league
pace-makers today, 15 to 2, and
8 to 7, as Detroit hiked its
American lead up to two full
; ?mes.
S.-'iuolboy Rowe personally
submerged the A's in the opener
on six hits, homering with a
man on base In the fourth for
the tying and winning runs.
First game:
R H F
Philadelphia 2 8 C
Detroit 15 18 1
Potter, Besse and Hayes, Wag
ner; Rowe and Sullivan.
Second game:
R. H. E.
Philadelphia 7 11 2
Detroit 8 11 5
Vaughan, and Hayes; Corsica,
Benton and Tebbetts.
Cleveland, July 27. (ZD-
Kendall Chase, Washington
southpaw who frequently is a
Cleveland Jinx, twirled steady
seven-hit ball today to give the
Nats a 7 to 1 victory which cost
the second-place Indians ground
In their effort to overhaul De
troit. R H K
Washington .... 7 13 3
Cleveland 17 1
Chase and Ferrell; Dobson,
Eisenstat, Andrews and Pytluk.
St. Louis, July 27. (IP) The
St. Louis Browns were in a slug
ging mood today and found the
Boston Red Sox fllngers made to
order for limbering up exercises
which netted 15 safeties and a
13 to 5 triumph.
R. H. E.
Boston 5 11 1
St. Louis 13 15 0
Ostermueller, Heving, Mus-
taikos and Glenn; Wagner, Ken
nedy and Swift.
Chicago, July 27. OP) For
most of this very warm after
noon Big Moose Solters might
just as well have had a lolly pop
in nis hand as a baseball bat
when he stepped up to the plate
for the White Sox against the
New York Yankees.
But in the 12th inning, when
it came time to maintain the
Yank's record for losing over
time games, the Moose obliged
by poking some of Marv Breu-
era slants into the left field
scats for his ninth homer of
the year and a 6 to 5 victory
for the Sox, ending a "comedy
of errors performance by both
sides.
Despite Solters game-wreck
ing wallop and homers by Joe
itordon and Tommy Hcnrich,
the highlight of the proceedings
came in the very first inning,
wnen Joe DiMaggio was tagged
with two errors on one play in
a neat bit of "now-he-has-it-now-
he-doesn't" out-fielding. With
two out, Joe Kuhcl lofted a fly
to Joe. DiMaggio caught it and,
with the rest of the Yanks, was
trotting off the field. As he ran,
however, he dropped the ball.
and Umpire Red pommel insis
ted the putout was not leaal.
since, under the rules, an out-
neicter must get the ball awav
after a catch.
DiMaggio picked up the ball
and threw It to the unprotected
tnira dbsc. It skipped all the
-' - Mim
-vw. nicrimir i aiinr? ciuo
protested the decision, with theUDoci Gitzen
usual results.
the decision, with .h.l.iw nu. "
R. H. E.
New York 5 9 3
Chicago 8 9 2
Hreuer and Dickey; Rigney
nn(l Tresh.
Rodeo Stars Billed
Here Aug. 17-18
At least 20 of the best ropers,
bulldosers and lirr,nr,vh,,.tr.
mmlate 3.000 persons.
Chinese Herbs Grand Opening
(mil her ne. location olll be e.laMl.hed In h heart of MedlorJ.
Heon. Bualnew aill be open on I he firM d.i o( Aii(iit. o
operation or new drusa necearv Our hern, are dentin, all. pre
pared for each ailment. Information ,ladl. mien llhoul chart-.
Henry Lee Herb Co.
:0 K. CENTRAL.
.WHILE
P2
Philadelphia, July 27,
Big Hugh Mulcahy won his
11th game of the season, his
(ouith in a row and ended Cin
cinnati's seven-game winning
streak today by pitching the
Phillies to a 5 to 3 triumph
over the National league lead
ers. The tall right-hander gave up
seven hits, two of them
scratches, ia turning back the
Reds for the third time this
year. He nearly wilted under
100-degree heat In the fourth
but revived to go the distance.
Score: R. H. E.
Cincinnati . 3 7 0
r-niiaaeipma 3 8
Riddle, and Hershberger; Mul
cahy and Warren.
Boston, July 27. (,P) Pitts
burgh's surging Pirates trounced
the Boston Bees 10-4 today for
their second victory In a row
In the current series, playing
before a slim crowd of 1,519.
more than half of them women.
The defeat sent the Bees to
but a half-game away from the
cellar and gave Pittsburgh its
15th triumph In the last 20
starts.
Score: R. H. E.
Pittsburgh 10 17 2
Boston 4 9 1
Bowman, MacFayden and
Davis, Lopez; Sullivan, Piech-
ota, Strincevich and Masi, And
rews and Tobin.
Brooklyn, July 27. (IP)
Brooklyn's nose-diving Dodgers
dropped both ends of a double
header to the St. Louis Card
inals today 4 to 2 and 6 to 3
to sink nine full games back
of the National league leading
Cincinnati Reds.
First game: R. H. E.
St. Louis 4 9 1
Brooklyn 2 7 1
Doyle, Lanier, Cooper, and
Owens; Grissom, Casey, Head,
and Phelps, Mancuso.
Second game: R. H, E.
St. Louis 6 9 1
Brooklyn 3 8 1
Shoun and Padgett; Davis,
Hamlin, Tamulls, Pressnell and
Mancuso.
New York, July 27. (JP)
After wasting two booming
triples, the Giants put together
a pair of singles and an infield
out in the seventh inning today
to break up a red-hot hurling
duel and nip the Chicago Cubs
1 to 0 before a puny crowd of
3,9R8.
Score: R. H. E.
Chicago 0 3 1
New York 14 0
Olsen, Root and Todd, Col
lins; Lohrman, Joiner and Dun
ning. ROGUES PLAY AT
Two games are scheduled in
the Southern Oregon league this
afternoon, Medfnrd's Rogues
play::i at Gold Hill and Cres
cent City entertaining Roseburg,
(irst-half champs, draw a bye.
The Rogues, who have yet to
taste victory in the arrnnri-hiilf '
rdic, win ihkc ine iieia wun
according to luanaL!pr li. A i
BASEBALL
(By Associated Press)
(Friday games!
National
St. Louis 3, Brooklyn 3 (called
ninth, rain).
Chicago 14. New York 1.
Pittsburgh 9, Boston 0.
Cincinnati 9. Philadelphia 5.
American
Philadelphia 7. Detroit 4.
Clevland 14. Washington 2.
New York 10, Chicago 2.
Boston 14. St. Louis 7.
Coait
Seattle 8 8. Portland 2 1.
Oakland 12. Hollywood 4.
San Diego 1, Sacramento 4.
Los Angeles 3. San Fran
cisco 7.
Dm ilall rrtLunt oi ads
D WI5 f t VG.. ROOM A. B.
TENNIS CLASSICiVETERAN GOLFERS
Sea Bright, N. J.. July 27.
W) Forced to use every shot
in his bag and to spend his
every ounce of courage, national
champion Bobby Riggs battled
uphill for three and a half
hours today before he could de
feat Frank Kovacs of Califor
nia In one of the most brilliant
final round matches of the 53-year-old
Sea Bright lawn ten
nis tournament.
Riggs, by his resourceful shot
making and refusal to accept
defeat, finally prevailed by 2-8,
0-6, 6-3, 11-9, 10-8.
Four times in the match
Kovacs was one point, removed
Olfrom victory onlv to have th
rampaging Riggs pull the game
out.
When the marathon ended
with darkness settling over the
court, a sell-out gallery stood
and cheered while Bobby re
ceived the famous Sea Bright
bowl from Holcombe Ward,
president of the U.S.L.T.A.
Not since 1923, when W. M.
(Little Bill) Johnston won the
tourney for the third time, has
a Sea Bright bowl been retired.
Bobby won twice before, but
never after such a titanic strug
gle. While Riggs' display of valor
was great, so too was Kovacs
spirit. Such retrieving as Bobby
accomplished in the two final
sets would have brought despair
to many other opponents.
Repeatedly, when the hard
hitting Californian slashed a
diagonal depth drive across
court, Riggs raced into position
to turn it back a winner of
his own.
With speed and placements,
the unranked Kovacs stroked
his way to a two set lead. It
wasn't until his rangy foe had
established this big advantage
that Riggs buckled down, quit
fencing and played his best ten
nis. Silverton, July 27. UP)
Portland B. it O. Transfer broke
a tie in the final inning last
night, defeating McElroys of
Portland, 2 to 1, and gaining
the semi-finals of the Oregon
semi-pro baseball tourney.
The winner of the B. & O.
bracket will tackle Albany for
the championship. .
In the other games last night,
Reliable Shoe, Portland, trim
med Battleground, 9 to 4, and
Jack and Jill, Portland nosed
out Medford, 8 to 7.
Scores included:
R
H.
10
9
Medford 7
Jack and Jill :.. 8
Rego and Hawkins:
Lelth-
eiser. Clow and W. Wittke.
Medford's loss to Jack and !
Jill Tavern, whom they had j
defeated four times this sea -
sun in Oregon ainie league
games, eliminated the Craters
from the state tournament. The
locals' other totirnev loss
as
a,u - ,- .
. ... , ..... .
m-wssary oy me innmmy ot
Hank Pacheco, Pat Patterson
and Riney Cook to make the
trip to Silverton. Pacheco and
Patterson could not leave their
Jobs and Cook was forced tol
remain hire with his American
Legion Junior team. I
Conn To Fight Joe
Pittsburgh, July 27.-,T I
Jrt7"al- J:T?"LZ
.-"'."" "'" ne I
had agreed with Promoter Miki
Jacobs on a 13 round heavy
weight title bout between Conn
and Champion Joe Louis at
New York in September.
Clotlns t.n for Too lata to Claa
ilt? Ada la I SO t m
fj WRESTLING!
MEDFORD
JIMMY GOODRICH
vs.
DANNY McSHANE
GEO. WAGNER
vs.
BOB KENASTON
OTIS CLINGMAN
vs.
MIKE NAZARIAN
Ladies' Night! Sea,s 5n, ",e a! Jrovvn's
MEDAL HONORS INiWEBBER FINALLY
ST. PAUL OPEN TO
St. Paul, Minn., July 21, OP)
Two dark horse veterans who
long have been prospecting
golf's tournament money trail
filed Joint claim today on medal
honors on the rich St. Paul open
golf championship.
They were the quiet, 37-year-old
Jim Foulis and the 34-year-old,
effervescent Willie Gog
gin, the former a long-time Chi
cago district campaigner and the
latter now a native of the Illi
nois metropolis after years of
playing out of San Francisco.
Each had 36-hole totals of 136
strokes as the tournament hit
the halfway point of its 72-hole
route. Foulis, a former St. Paul
champion, put together nines of
34-33 for a five under par sec
ond round 67. Goggin, who
never hit the "pay dirt" of a
major title, scored a six under
par 66 today on nines of 33-33
to gain a share of pace-making
honors.
Only a stroke off the par
shattering pace, however, was
rotund Ed Oliver of Hornell.
N. Y., who had a 71 today for
a 137 aggregate, and right back
of him was a corps of stars in
such close pursuit that one of
the hottest finishes in the tour
ney s 14-year history was in
prospect as the field headed into
tomorrow's 36-hole final pro
gram over the rolling Keller
course.
Dick Metz of Oijk Park, 111.,
defending champion as a result
of a record 270 here a year ago.
fired another three under par 69
today for a 138 total. Bracketed
at 140 were the two low scoring
amateurs, Jim Ferrier, the open
and amateur champion of Aus
tralia, and Wilford Wehrle of
Chicago, and Big Ralph Guldahl
of Chicago.
TITLE
Wooden Box Friday night
clinched the third-round cham
pionship of the American Soft
ball league by defeating Fluh
rer's Breadeaters, 6 to 2, and
as a result of the victory will
play a three game series with
Medco, champs of the first and
second rounds, for the city title
and right to enter the district
tournament at Klamath Falls in
August. The series will start
Tuesday night.
Joe Peccia pitched five-hit
ball and struck out -eight, and
after allowing two runs in the
first inning he settled down and
allowed only one Fluhrer's bat
ter to reach third base. Maru.
Fluhrer's hurler, yielded seven
blows.
In the other American loop
clash, Copco hammered out a
20 to 11 victory over Jennings
Tire company. Soller led the at-
tur-lr iL-itH tu-n n1 I D ; .
ham nH p rH.'.i.. ui,'
three-baggers. Hughes hit two
doublcs for the Winners. Bow.
crman tripled and Williams
doubled for the losers.
Bohl hit a home run in the
eighth inning to give Bear Creek!
a 2 to 1 conauest of Elks, and
-t. , v . . '
.--a
games.
Scores:
-Copco jo is S
aai. 1 1 13 e '
R "'" -" P Sakr.m.; Jen-,
nln. Wl limi nd Nv.
j
1
wooden (
Fluhrer's Z ZZ 2
Pcci and D'Arcy; Mru nd j. !
ci,k
i J ?W in Colorado, H.l09 feet
. !
C. B!Ht and Archer;
Bean and j .
Woou-n.
Oas-o
TV:n!er
RiTnoMa and shtmoda
and rraley.
. i 4 S
10 11
J. Yetae;
Slatl Trtbun want ads.
ARMORY
MONDAY NIGHT,
8:30 P. M
DEFEATS BEAVERS
Portland, July 27. UP)
Young Les Webber of the Seat
tle Rainlers won his first vic
tory over Portland In several
seasons this afternoon, 9-1,
turning in a nifty three-hit per
formance. His own wildness in
the ninth cost him a shutout.
The victory gave Seattle a
6-3 lead in the current 11-games-in-a-week
Pacific Coast
league series.
For the second time this
week Webber pitched 5 2-3 inn
ings of no-hit ball and he had
a two-hit shutout before he
walked two men in the ninth
and Berbstrom singled in a
run.
Seattle hit Byron Speece free
ly but the damage was in
creased by five Portland er
rors, three of them by the Beav
ers' kid catcher, Shann Denis
ton. Score: R. H. E.
Seattle 9 13 2
Portland . J 3 5
Webber and Campbell; Speece
and Deniston.
San Francisco, July 27. (&)
Poor fielding proved costly
for the San Francisco Seals to
day as Los Angeles took a coast
league baseball game, 5 to 1.
Johnny Barrett, San Fran
cisco centerfield, was the chief
offender. He muffed Cihocki's
fly ball In the fourth, allowing
Collin's to score, and in the sev
enth he mishandled Carpenter's
line drive. Novikoff and Moore
followed this up with singles
that brought in Carpenter.
Score: R. H. E.
Los Angeles 5 12 0
San Francisco 14 1
Stine and Holm; Dasso and
Sprinz. .
TILLAMOOK YOUTH;
IS
Portland, Ore., July 27. UP)
George Coats, a Tillamook 13-year-old
whose nickname is
"Deacon," won the sixth annuol
Oregon soap box derby today.
He will compete In the national
race of home-made speeders at
Akron, Ohio, August 11.
Al Stone, 12, Woodburn, was
second and John Coats, 11,
brother of the sweepstakes win
ner, won a special race for
out-of-town entrants.
BALL AT .507 CLIP
Grants. Pass, Juiv 27. (P,
Joe Gray, once the galloping
ghost of the Oregon State col
lege gridiron, isn't doing so
badly in the Southern Oregon
league's Sunday games. At bat
67 times to date with the Grants
Pass Merchants, he has con
nected for 34 hits and an un
usual batting percentage of .507.
Clark Wins Title.
Detroit, July 27. (A, Robert
Clark, 31-year-old St. Paul,
ihr i'o.u .. n'.w?n
.iinn naraware salesman
"Z, JL"' " P"D"C 'mk,l
.8"" '"pionsnip here today
w iin an b and n viptni-v ,..,!
.
Bobb Chiele
Klamath Falls. July 27
Bobby Chirk wr.ti., -
a hosoTtal here IZll ' Z
frj.tllrf un ...VfLj " 8
automobile crash near here last!
night.
. : . in n
ln nignest point reached by
Anv railrnai4 i . u .-..
Sim., i. .h.
above sea level.
GREEN PINE
SLABS
FACTORY
BUNDLED
Or fill your car or trailer at
corner of North Central Ave
Timber Products Company
Phona
If Mike Nazarian, the Armen
ian grappler who will make his
first northwest appearance in tha
armory Monday night, lives up to
advance reputation and decides
to get tough with his opening
event opponent, Otis CHngman,
the entire Promoter Mack Lil
lard program will feature set-
ence versus brutality.
For the two other matches
Jimmy Goodrich against Danny
McShane and George Wagner
opposing Sgt. Bob Kenaston
will be strictly cleanie versus
meanie tussles, the sort of
matches fans like best.
Nazarian is reputed to be one
of those grapplers who turns
villainous without a great deal
of coaxing, although not a dirt
dispenser on the order of Ken
aston and McShane, for ex
ample. The 190-pound gent is
rugged and tough, and when he
feels a little off color stuff Is
necessary to his success he
doesn't hesitate in cutting loose.
Mike will be facing a capable
opponent in Clingman, the
Amarillo, Texas smoothie, who
is one of the game's better legi
timate workmen. Otis can be re
lied on to provide sufficient
competition for almost any
wrestler now at large, be he
clean or dirty, so it won't matter
much what path Nazarian takes
in his first match here.
As before noted, the Goodrich
McShane main event of one
hour, and the Wagner-Kenastoti
middle go of six lO-minuta.' .
rounds, will both be roughie t I
versus legitimate grappler, with "
McShane and Kenaston in .
former role. ' , ' -..- t
it wm be ladies night, '.-.if,.' -
SENO
!PT
Washington, July 27. &)
Service in the citizens military
training corps will not provide
exemption from compulsory mil
itary trailing under the leg
islation pending in congress,
officials said today.
They added, however, that a
man with such training prob
ably would start "on a little
higher level" than others drafted
for the proposed training period.
With such a start, they said,
CMTC men might be given
ranks as non-commissioned of
ficers for the compulsory train
ing. They also said that n-.
j officers would be exempt from
vuuatripuon Decause they al
ready were subject to call for
active service.
Russia Boosts Navy.
Moscow, July 27 f.V-Ad-
miral Nikolai Kuznetzoff, com
missar of the navy, disclosed
tonight that Soviet Russia would
add 168 warships to her fleet T
this year and urged that Rus- '
sian naval power be stepped up
to parity with the country's
army and air strength.
There are 788 railroad nnrt
swiicmng and terminal com
panies in operation in the Unit-
rt sr.,..
--"
SIMONIZ takes the beat
ing for your ear's finishl
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