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The Pittsburgh Press from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania • Page 34

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PAGE 34 THE PITTSBURGH PRESS, FRIDAY. OCTOBER 27, 1944 iMroffDirasi dhxatfUixsiifirD FDDd the VDIIMQE Coffesfe Football Six Unbeatens By CHESTER L. SMITH Sportt Editor 1 Risk Records Soldiers' Poor Record May Prove Booby Trap For Battered Panthers By CARL HUGHES Afraid that their "breather" with the Chatham Field Army Air Base eleven may turn out to be a booby trap and that the Blockbusters may be anything but duds, Pitt's footballers were seeking a cure for over-confidence today as they awaited tomorrow's Stadium battle. A glance at their own record should supposedly dispel any notion of superiority the Panthers might have, but only if they failed to also look at the Blockbuster On Gridiron NEW YORK, Oct. 27 (UP) Six perfect record football teams, more or less dominat ing collegiate competition thus far, are going to be hard put tonight and to scores.

The summary of Chatham1 morrow to maintain their at the Airport last night by B-24 Liberators are pilots, bomb Field's gridiron achievements could hardly instill fear in the hearts of positions in their hardest the local eleven. tests of the season. The soldiers have had 179 points Only one of the sextet, Pennsyl- ardiers, navigators, aerial engineers, and other crew members who are not specializing in football, but find it a interlude between training classes. rolled up on them while scoring 21 on their own accord, but Pitt hasn't vamas boy-powered Quakers, is a definite underdog, but if any of the other favorites, Army, Georgia Tech, Tulsa, Ohio State, or Notre Dame should be defeated it hardly Legion Backing Soldiers While they admit they're Dlavine exactly been on top of the pile either. Panther opponents got 192 points at their expense while the for fun and not for scholarships or any of the other inducements, the Jungle Cats managed to make 93.

would be in the nature of a major upset. May Be Close Tomorrow's contest may turn out Middies Rated Over Penn uiocKDUsters nevertheless have the same ideas about winning as anyone else. A triumph over the once-mighty Panthers would look mighty good to them right now and also Penn, facing a Navy team that to be the closest here this year and thus one of the most exciting. Up to now every game has been one-sided with the issue never in failed to live up to advance notices, to American Legion Post 135 of Atlanta, which is sponsoring the team. was rated a touchdown inferior, mainly because football experts expected the Middies to come through at last.

Notre Dame, which showed doubt, but there are reasons to believe that the Flyers are good enough to give Clark Shaughnessy's To make sure the visitors have cheering section of their own certain vulnerabilities against Wis green hands an argument. tomorrow, arrangements have been One reason would be that In consin, may have even more trouble against the speed-keyed Illinois eleven, but rates 8-5 to come losing four, tieing one and winning made by 87 Allegheny County Legion posts to have their members in uniform and present to urge another, the Blockbusters were tangling with other service elevens GREATEST BACKFIELD DUEL OF 1944 is the big attraction in tomorrow's Midwest clash between Notre Dame and Illinois, two of the top-ranking college grid teams. Claude (Buddy) Young, above left, is Illinois' sensational speedster and 10-touchdown getter as well as the National Junior and Big Ten sprint champion. Bob Kelly, right, mainspring of the Irish, has scored 54 points and is a leading all-America backfield candidate. boasting heavier and more expen through.

Army's Cadets, thus far untested, are 8-5 over a fast improving Duke team in New York's first major game, while Ohio State is 8-5 over a Minnesota team that has shown scoring capabilities. enced talent, except in the case of on tne soldiers. Forty of the organizations plan to furnish color guards for the opening ceremony, which will feature a Legion band Newberry College their lone yic tim. When they lost to Fort Pierce, for instance, the Georgia soldiers had to face such gridiron elites as and 2500 Boy Scouts in a flag-raising prior to the game. When Illini Meets Uhh Tulsa, unbeaten, gets its sternest opposition of the season against the Lawrence Trainer, county com Oklahoma, A.

M. Cowboys, also Marshall Goldberg and Bill Daley, and in almost every case they have come up against professionals and mander; Ralph Fargolstein, senior vice commander; C. C. Kellenberg, Young to Duel unbeaten and untied, but the bowl-minded Hurricane eleven is a 7-5 favorite. Georgia Tech faces the pro-loaded Georgia Pre-flight squad ex-collegians.

No Toreigners' Last Show for Three Weeks- Hornets Face SHff est Test In Capitols Here Tomorrow By JOE HTJHN An opportunity to entrench themselves more firmly junior vice commander; Daniel Hartbauer, past state commander; and the five county district commanders, J. Ben Schwab, Leonard J. Bradley, J. T. Garbett, Charles W.

Batrcsh, and Frank Slocum Kelly Tomorrow Unlike many service teams, tonight and the chances for a let down, the Engineers are only Chatham Field relies only on men stationed at the base and does not a 6-5 choice. CHAMPAIGN, 111., Oct. 28 (UP) Fliers-Gremlins Even A 20-year-old memory and the arranged the details for the American Legion's participation in the affair. The top game of the week-end "import" name stars to augment the available manpower. Besides they suffer from that old bugaboo of transfers, and only this week lost Guard Heinz Eisele, one of the prospect of the greatest backfield in their hold on the league leadership presents itself for the Hornets in their clash with the Indianapolis team at The Gardens tomorrow night.

This will be the last ap for service teams finds the perfect record Randolph Field Fliers and Third Air Force Gremlins of Mor duel of 1944 Buddy Young of IUi Army hasn't taken on anything as robust as Duke and Illinois is far and away the liveliest opponent yet to show up on the Notre Dame calendar, so it will be on these engagements that the country's football gourmets will pounce for the main course of tomorrow's football feast. West Point, we think, can sleep more comfortably on its assignment than South Fooling with the Illini is like lighting a match and going down cellar to look for a leak in gas pipe. In no conceivable way can the results be conducive to the preservation of life and limb. There is so much speed in the Illinois back-field that the odds are all against keeping it trapped for the full 60 minutes. Buddy Young is as apt to run 90 yards as 10; Eddie Bray and Paul Patterson are only a shade less dangerous; and Notre Dame, with Frank Dancewicz and Joe Gasparella, will have no edge in the quarterback slot in this game.

Not with Don Greenwood calling them for the Orange and Blue. Up front the Irish have an undeniable edge, but a punt run-back or a pass intercepted is a mighty leveler on occasions. Army has so much that it has had to soft-pedal its own press notices, but it's just as well the schedule is beginning to toughen, for any team can go to pot if the deck is stacked in its favor week after week. The Blue Devils, who lost to Navy, 7-0, may deal a few picture cards of its own, but hardly enough. The coaches at the Point are trying to work up to the Notre Dame game next month exposing as little as possible.

They went so far as to keep their thunderous fullback, Felix Blanchard, out of the lineup against the Coast Guard last week, but mav unveil the Bishopville Beezark for the edification of their New York patrons tomorrow. Pitt's engagement with Chatham Field, at the Stadium, and West Virginia's visit to Penn State come under the heading of good entertainment, without barging into the national picture. Both the Panthers and Blockbusters have long since lost all illusions of grandeur, but a matchmaker would call the contest a 'natural' and let it go at that. State has lost its bloc of Navy and Marine trainees and is now back on a freshman diet, but with results that have been highly gratifying so far. The Lion kids held off Colgate during a tortuous first half a week ago and then showed their nerve by running Johnny Chuckran across the goal line on the business end of a punt in the fourth quarter to win a decision that had been earmarked for the Red Raiders.

Tomorrow, the States will have Jimmy Walthall, the Mountaineers' yearling handyman from Princeton, W. on their hands. Walthall possesses potentialities which could make him one of the great backs at Mor-gantown, and needs only experience and the added weight another season or two will provide. Navy has dropped two and Penn none a surprise in both cases but it's generally admitted that all the Midshipmen need is for someone to throw them into gear. They've been idling too long, and tomorrow may be the day.

And Brown rates over Dartmouth in a match that may be complicated because the Green Mountain Boys just aren't there any more. Twenty-eight of them shipped out this week, and it was questionable whether or not their coach, Earl Brown, would be around, either. He, too, is waiting for the postman to deliver his orders, and after looking at the empty lockers, probably hopes the man with the gray suit and brown pouch comes soon. In the Middle West, they're calling Indiana over Iowa, Ohio State against Minnesota and Purdue to stomp Michigan, and wondering if the Big Ten isn't drifting into a finale for the title between the hopped-up Buckeyes and Illinois. The good people of Cleveland will draw that one.

They didn't think so when they booked the game into their Municipal Stadium last summer, but the signs are all pointing in that direction. With football, on the whole, some distance off its normal course, the number of Grade-A backs '44 has brought out is noteworthy. It would be natural to expect Army and Navy to have more than their quota, and they have Blanchard, Minor, Davis and a few more at West Point, and Bob Jenkins, Hal Hamberg and Joe Sullivan heading a formidable list at Annapolis but Notre Dame flashes Bob Kelly and Dancewicz, Young and Greenwood are at Illinois, Ohio State's toast is Les Horvath, Hunchy Hoernschemeyer charms Indiana. Jug Girard of Wisconsin and Al Sica and Tony Manici of Penn are just a few more. Some are veterans, but the majority are youngsters fresh off the high school fields boys who will be heard from for the next four years and who assure football a terrific rebirth after -the war.

nois vs. Bob Kelly of Notre Dame starting eleven. ris Field, N. squaring off at San Nine members of the squad have will draw an estimated 70,000 fans pearance of the locals on their home ice for three weeks. Their road trip gets under way at seen action overseas and are now Antonio tomorrow night and the odds are strictly even, with the Weakened Lions Welcome W.

Va. STATE COLLEGE, Pa, Oct. 27 (Special) The Hallowe'en goblins into Memorial Stadium here tomorrow to witness the Midwest's top instructors" at the Field. The re-mainer of the invaders who arrived Indianapolis on Sunday night. winner likely to rate as the top military eleven in the nation.

Other perfect record squads may The Caps occupy the runner-up position in the race, three points arrived ten days ago at Penn State when the Marine trainee unit left COLLEGE FOOTBALL have it easier. Yale is 3-1 to top Rochester, Wake Forest is 9-5 over Miami tonight, and unbeaten but behind the Wasps, so that a win Major Hoope, Upset Specialist, Basks in Glory over Coach Johnny Sorrell's charges tied Tennessee is 8-5 over Clem will increase the Wasps' margin. son. Alabama, tied by unbeaten, TODAY Pitt at Navy Bucknell at Temple. Michigan State at Warns.

It is going to be a tough en rates 8-5 over Kentucky tonight. counter as the visitors have one of Pouth Carolina at Charleston Coaat Twice tied Southern Californian is 3-1 to beat St. Mary's youngsters. the best outfits in the circuit. They Guard.

football game. Ticket sales now stand at more than 65,000 and temporary bleachers have been constructed, boosting the stadium's capacity to 70,900. University officials expect a sellout which would break the stadium attendance record of 69,509 set in 1929 when Cagey Bob Zuppke tuned up Illinois for a 17-7 victory over Navy. Pair Big Attraction The big gate attraction is the clash of Notre Dame's undefeated Irish Ramblers, rated the nation's No. 1 team, against once-beaten Illinois, the nation's fastest team.

But the Young-Kelly match and are a farm for the Detroit Red wfngs, of the National Hockey Purdue 7-5 Over Michigan Purdue is 7-5 over Michigan. In wake Foreat at Mlamt U. Georgia Pre-Flirht at Georsrtu Tech. xa Tech at West Texas Tr TOMORROW LOCAL the campus with eight members of the first team, but West Virginia's football representatives pulled in today and promised to release another batch of ghosts and gremlins tomorrow in their game with the Lions. Coach Bob Higgins had no complaints after Freshman Johnny Chuckran ran back a Colgate punt 50 yards to defeat the Red Raiders in the final minute last Saturday, 6-0, but just because the youngsters showed up so well.

In the mud at Hamilton, N. has not convinced him that they'll match that performance against the Mountaineers. League. Just how formidable the dianas spunky Hoosiers are 8-5 Caps are was attested in the game over Iowa and Great Lakes is 3-2 with Hershey, whom they defeated Pitt ts. Chatham Field at Stad.um (2 over Wisconsin in games InvolV' By MAJ.

AMOS B. HOOPLE Upset Specialist Egad! Have you noted how your prognosticator has been picking upsets that no other football author even dreamed of in his wildest flights of fancy? So it is, spurred on by the recent amazing predictions emanating from this fertile mind, I am announcing five super-juicy specials p. ing Big Ten teams. Iowa State ana on Wednesday by a 7-3 score. In an exhibition with the chocolate city team earlier in the season the Hornets had to be content with Missouri rate 3-1 respectively over Kansas State and Nebraska, while Oklahoma is a one touchdown underdog against Texas- Christian in a 5-5 deadlock.

While it is conceded that the nostalgic memories threaten to present edition of the Wasps is overshadow the team fight. an inter-conference game. The big game in the Southwest for Saturday Duke to defeat one of the most formidable In Young, Illinois' celebrated "swish1 pits Texas and Rice, battling for recent years, the going will get back, has a chance to break a mm the conference lead at even money record tomorrow which was set in UISIKIIT West Virrinia at Penn State. EAST Army Duke (New Tork). Syracuse at Boston College.

Dartmouth at Brown. Colgate at Columbia. Muhlenberg at Franklin-Marshall Rutgers at Lafayette. Navy at Penn. Rochester at Tale.

Brooklyn College at Sonnecticut CCNT at NYU MIDWEST Notre Dame at Illinois. Iowa at Indiana. Purdue at Michigan. Minnesota at Ohio State. Great Lakes at Wisconsin.

Baldwin-Wallace at Wooster Denison va. Miami (O.) at 1.... (on. Iowa State at Kansas State. Missouri at Nebraska.

SOUTH Clemson at Tennessee. Maryland at Florida. tougher as the season Some of the opposing teams are 1924, when Red Grange scored 13 California is 3 to 2 over the Washington Huskies, while UCLA touchdowns. In 1924 and 1925, is a touchdown favorite over Ala meda Coast Guard. young and will improve with experience as the rookies become more accustomed to their new surroundings.

Some of the youngsters are playing their first professional Grange's last year, the "Galloping Ghost" drew three of the largest crowds ever to pack Memorial Stadium, and now a fleet Negro freshman is scheduled to draw even Smart FaH suitings in a wide variety worsted and hockey this season. a larger crowd while taking a shot at Red mark. Toronto Loans Two North Carolina Stat va. Will nm and Young Nets 10 Touchdowns Down hiaplz Lane Bowlers Honor Franz Sunday By JOHNNY MOCK To Bolster Hornets (B Current National and Big Ten Mary (Norfolk). VMI at Virginia.

Kentucky at Albany. Georgia S. LSD (Atlanta. Arkansas vs. Mississippi (Memphis).

SHD at Tulane. Daniel Field at Mavnort Kavai. Eric (Doc) Prentice, 17-year-old sprint champion, Young has shown an amazing shiftiness and change-of-pace in scoring 10 touchdowns left-winger, and Ken Schultz, 18-year-old center, were obtained on loan last night from the Toronto Selman Field at Southwest Louisiana as Illinois has defeated Illinois Alteration North Carolina Prn-riirnt at Jackson mm Normal. Indiana, Iowa and Pitts burgh, tied Great Lakes and lost to FREE Frankie Franz, selected to represent the Pittsburgh area at the annual Match Play tenpin tour Maple Leafs of the National League, by the Hornets. Both saw service last season with the Hershey Bears as chattels of the Toronto club.

Duke 7, Army 0 Penn 13, Navy 7 "Rochester 13, Yale 6 vine Naval. Bainbridge Naval at Maxwell Field. SOUTHWEST Oklahoma A at Tulsa. TCU at Oklahoma. Texas at Rice.

Purdue. Not far behind is Kelly, the nament at Chicago Columbia 7, Colgate 0 Kirkland is a 147-pounder from will be honored at a Umidt Kirkland Lake, where he Htrringbottti Strip Strip! Irish's great sophomore right-half who also is a leading ail-American candidate. Kelly has scored 54 points and has been the mainspring played as a junior, and Schultz, 160 Lafayette 12, Rutgers 7 Dartmouth 14, Brown 6 Muhlenberg 30, F. M. 7 Penn State 33, West Va, 0 pocvvrrncrzi pounds, saw junior service in his dinner given by the Bowling Proprietors' Assn.

of Western Pennsylvania, at the Roosevelt Hotel, Sunday at 5 p. m. in Notre Dame's victories over Pitts home town of Preston, ont. Born were to arrive for practice today. burgh, Tulane, Dartmouth and Wis- Third Air Force at Randolph Field.

Amarillo AAF at South Plains AAF. FAB WEST Washington at California. Second Air Force at Colorado College. Utah State at Denver U. St.

Mary's at Southern Califronla. Utah at Nevada. SUNDAY Coast Guard Academy at Holy Cross. Iowa Pre-Flight at Marquette. Camp Lee at Cherry Point Marine.

Lincoln AB at Fort Warren. Camp Peary at Richmond AAB. Fourth Air Force at St. Mary's Pre-Fit Night came sons in. Chuck Shannon, defenseman, and Considered by most Art Giroux, winger, have signed their contracts to make a total of The records: Total Average 3 tommy tenpin authorities the leading bowler of the Yardage Gain TJ3.

P.A.T. 18 players owned outright by the Kelly 382 8.5 8 6 Hornets. Young 546 12.7 10 Bisons Win First In Season Finale 09 S3 IB MT 0 (D IS 0) 8 Sports Stew Served Hot By PAUL KURTZ; BETHANY, W. Va, Oct. 27 (Special) The Bethany College fem metropolitan area, Franx Franz was selected to uphold the reputation of this district as one of the principal bowling centers of the country.

It will be the first time Western Pennsylvania has been represented in the competition among the nation's outstanding keglers. Present title holder is Ned Day and only 120 of the country's top performers are permitted to enter the tournament. Officers and members of the Pennsylvania State Bowling Proprietors will be guests of the local association. football team is wlnless no longer, They scored their first victory in two years here yesterday with a 28-6 triumph over the Ohio State Bucknell 13, Temple 6 Illinois 20, Notre Dame 19 Indiana 27, Iowa 6 Purdue 13, Michigan 7 Minnesota 14, Ohio State 13 Wisconsin 13, Gt. Lakes 6 Missouri 19, Nebraska 0 Iowa State 33, Kansas State 13 Iowa Pre-Flight 19, Marquette 0 Tulsa 14, Okla.

7 Randolph Field 32, 3rd Air Force 0 Ga. Tech 21, Ga. Pre- Flight 20 Tennessee 27, Clemson 0 Wake Forest 28, Miami 6 La. State 13, Georgia 7 Alabama 21, Kentucky 6 Wm. Mary 19, N.

C. State 7 Pitt 32, Chatham Field 6. Texas 12, Rice 7 Mississippi 13, Arkansas 0 Florida 20. Maryland 6 Tulane 20. S.M.U.

7 Oklahoma 20, Texas Christian 6 March Field 14, St. Mary's Pre-Flight 7 So. Calif. 20, St Mary's 7 California 13, Wash. 0 Paving the way for the Invasion of the Chatham Field Army Air Base Blockbusters, who play Pitt at the Stadium tomorrow afternoon, is Capt.

T. Kirk Heselbarth, of 4307 Dakota Street He is the base's public relations officer Capt. Heselbarth, along with CpL. E. K.

Langille, of Boston and a Pitt graduate, has been here most of this eleven in the teason finale. The Bisons, who lost six in as many attempts last year, had if "i Sv dropped decisions to Pitt, West 1 Virginia, and two to Denison this A 244 by Filer, of Village Tavern. campaign. The Navy V-12 students who make up the squad leave this week arranging publicity, entertainment and other plans for the soldier squad He recently returned from two years of overseas duty to take the post at Chatham Field and is a former president of the Allegheny County Savings and Loan League and a governor of the Pittsburgh Real Estate Board Artemus C. Leslie, Potentate of Syria Temple, has invited the Chatham Field gridders to a stag party at the Temple tonight The members of week-end, thus necessitating tne abbreviated schedule.

and a 238 by K. Garritan, of Beech-view Moose, were the high single games in the Greater Pittsburgh Duckpin League, as Leister, of Williams Buick, hit the top total with 620. Another 600 scored wasHinch. ir sTsi Bethany scored on a safety in the first period and a pair of touchdowns in each of the second and third quarters. The Buckeye Bees' lone marker came in the of and who bagged himself a 607.

Sheraden heads the league final period. witn 17 and 4, four games over Variety Alleys, in runner-UD posi tion. O'Neill, with 177, heads the Three-star specials. individuals. Adelsberg the team who have seen service over- Heselbarth seas will be introduced to the hosts S2C Sidney Adelsberg, former most valuable gridder at Peabody High, is playing on one of the teams at TJ.

S. Naval Training Center, Bainbridge, Md. Bainbridge recently defeated Camp Peary, 7-0 Johnny Ellis, who has been starring at left end for the formidable New Brighton Class A squad, has accounted for 36 points (six touchdowns) to be the leading scorer in Beaver Valley Runnerup is Leon Presto, also an end at Ellwood City, who has scored 31 points. i i' Frankie Franz, in his first games Prepare Now for Safe Driving with the Lucky Strike House Tenpin League, ran up a 237 to take the high single. Schmieler captured the three-game mark with 617.

The Oaks garnered the team laurels with 2530 and 905. Pines Army, Penn to nose out Navy, Rochester to drub Yale, Minnesota to beat Ohio State and Illinois to shade Notre Dame. Speaking of the magnificent average I have compiled this season, ah-um-er hak-kaffl Let's see, what were we discussing? Small matter, but have you ever enjoyed the luxury of a properly cured meerschaum pipe? Pipe smokers are dreamers, the poets say, and perhaps the average reader will understand my forecast more fully if he curls up in a HAWKINSQN Wlnfir Trtatfs continue to head the league with mad at Greensburg and was eliminated from the AA" race last Friday night, it was the Lions' first time to be given a "goose-egg" since the second game of the 1943 season when they were held in another scoreless draw at 14 and 4. x. dr 'f Pipe Shop set the pace in the 2S Charley Wilcox, of Curtisville, who formerly played third base for the New Kensington Corbins, has been listed as killed in action in France That Corbin infield of 1939 included Wilcox at the hot corner, John Henkel, second; Jack Nee, short; and Johnny Fugal, first Wilcox is the second Corbin player to be killed In service, the other being "Bill' Cnlp When Altoona High was held in a scoreless tie In a sea of home by Westinghouse Prior lE- T- Good Fellowship Tenpin League by rolling a new three-game to that, Altoona was held score mgn.

2592. Boiler Shop banged out the high one-game. 917. Welsh. less back in 1939 by Braddock when the latter won, 6-0 Only four zeros appear for Altoona in the past nine years according to lion statisticians.

big chair with his meerschaum, and lets the smoke' drift and wreathe lazily until slumber comes. Ah, yes! But let us on to more serious pursuits. Open Hearth, turned in the best single performance, 234; while Hu-dacko of Blast Furnace contributed to the good fellowship by tak 24 HOUR SERVICE For Cars For Tracks Ttooarjtnada fjr1 ImportedRnn IMPORTED RUM It's an old Cuban custom to drink this rum straight, and here in America KINGS IMPORTED RUM is receiving a royal welcome! Try it in place of your usual straight drinks, or as a mixer in a Cuba Libre, Manhattan or Old Fashioned it's sure to "dick" with you! I diid raffias radlaa. FIGHT RESULTS ing tne total count with 567. Welfare leads the Page Bowling League, one- game ahead of Testing, the league leaders having won seven and lost twq.

Single and total three-game is held by Yankosky, of Stainless, 230 and 587. Stainless holds the team honors with 873 and 2380. must "Qi" wausa seeeecn sssa i Staff Sgt. Joseph A. Kern, of the Air Corps and former Trinity High athlete, has been reported missing in action in the North African area since Oct.

10 Andy Kerr, long an advocate of the single and double wing, has adopted the "T' this year at Colgate, Wee almost everybody else His squad jumps from the to the single wing formation with startling abruptness but still Penn State upset the apple-cart and beat Colgate, 6-0. last Saturday There was a petition before the Catholic Diocesan athletic council to permit St. George High to play basketball, but this was turned down and the Allen-toumers will be required to pay the penalty of suspension until next July 1 Sam Steinberg, Midnight Oiler member, is getting a physical checkup at Magee Hospital and expects to leave shortly for his annual visit to Miami. 0410 Full 45 Quart MudM el mm tfbSTON Freddie Sehott. 208.

Pater-on. N. deeisioned Earl Lowmu, 210Vs. Detroit S. ST.

LOCIS Johnny Greco. 145. Montreal, knocked out Oscar Sum, 14S, New-port. R. I.

(6). PORTLAND. ME. Coley Welch. 14.

Portland, deciaioned Burlie Lanier, 164 H. IMPOrTED S0TTLE0 IT KASSE BISTIIURS PRODUCTS COR. PHILA, PA. ir nuaoeipnia. HIGHLAND PARK.

N. 1. Pha Palmer knocked out Milton Skyer. five: Jimmy Pell deciaioned Jo remaodcz. FALL RIVER.

MASS. Oscar St. Pi Pler. i-j re I 137. call Biver, knocked out Moore, 140.

Paterson. H. J. 11)..

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