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Show THE PAGE FOUR HERALD-JOURNAL,- MONDAY," LOGAN, UTAH, " DECEMEER 21. 1931. Second Independent Hoop League Is Organized and Boxing Ten Teams Likely To Join In Latest Group OUR BOARDING HOUSE i By AHERN - inrUlDCrv nipif Dec NEW YORK, BY JACK CHRISTIANSEN To soy that basketball is a popular sport m Logan and Cache Valley is putting it mildly. On Saturday evening at the Chamber of Commerce rooms, a slKth .league was otgamzed and will toe called the Independent League of Cache Valley. flight teams representing six towns of the valley were present at the meeting and two teams signified their intention of entering the league but were UB&totc to have representatives present. The eight teams present were as follows: Piggly Wiggly. Logan Teachers Association aid Logan Ail Stars, all Irom Iaigan, and Lewiston, Hynim, Clarkston, Newton and Hyde Park from out of town. Wells-vil- le and Richmond were not present but reports have it that they will enter teams in the league. Noble NeiLsen of Logan conducted the meeting and various phases pertaining to the opening were discussed. It was decided to hold another meeting on Tuesday, at 7 p. m. at the Chamber of Commerce apoms. At that time a schedule will toe drawn and all matters pertaining to the opening game on 2, will be dis- January Monday, cussed. Tentative plans eail for two games each week to toe played on Monday and Thursday evenings with one game in each town. There is a possibility that the league will be divided into two divisions with the winners or two top teams in each division meeting in a playoff at the end of the season. Officers were elected and Alton Tony" Sorenson, a former Logan high school star as president, Bill Peterson of Hjrrum and a one time South s Cache hoopster, and Vic of Lewiston, who used to play wUh the Union Pacific team, as diiectors Those piesent at meeting includedLewiston, Vic Hyrum, BiU Peterson; de Wad-doup- - s, Wad-doup- Ctaflkston, Gnffin; Dewey Newto- Jorgenson; Hyde Paik, Pcrkes; Piggly Wiggly, Nobip Neilsen; Logan AH Stars, And Logan Vaughan Jeffs; Teachers Association, Kenneth Vandcrhoff. JU1 teams are urged to have a representative at the meeting Tiiefitl.iy evening or their in the league will be forfeited. n,-Carl Clint mem-fowsto- ip N SALT EARLIf PROMISE CHICAGO, Dec. 21 Sport Parade c Ga-wgi- -- se-o- freckles and His Friends lm wot JOt MS lb Tikg SC.E OUR OOttES Cl. OB Y vbr,too, Soul TUG jft I VtM POODLE ftoOOLE OSTAP'S M OTHER "THE W- - "Tgc WOODI-- E ACt TUG 'j tOODt-E- 7... m L, f'w o HiiV L MILE, IT Tco' - lJ LIFE VJ OIQECTlOlJ, Only fourteen days to Col return, and all will b? COWES pSCAE. ( news. TPECI AU- T The dividing line between sports and news, at all events, is very linely drawn Keep chocolate forsakes the sport pages and makes the news rol-uwhen they report him because he wasnt quite married enough to meet the monthly stand irds of these United States. John MeGraw, to cite another example, make the news sections when he goes to court against one of the baseball magnates, Franrl, X MvQuado, notwithstanding that the ease sn voted uf pugilism as well fts baseball. Mr MeGiaw accusing Mr. McQuade of going around socking folks he didnt like. Uuder normal relations, when the Army and Navy lads kick each other all over the lot In the Yankee stadium, in the exuberance of sheer brotherly love, the event Is properly sport. When, on the other hand, they eonsent with cold dignity, to an unofficial game to aid the unemployed and they fight each other because they have to, and not because they love each other. the matter becomes one of NldV1 X MEVEC. UEACO TELL OP CUCH A TUIM3 ALL ipe PCOAA Re .WILL SUCPClSFO WIJEM UF UGeRS TU- - MAtAE 1 TAVE vy pos u'V FOR TH CLU0 UxlSE- 'ME LL 8LMLD A PiCE AMHa IE IT MICE AM CO SWELL 5PEMP MOST OF CHDISTMAS PAN IM KtPS forgiven. , Siitiiea, po disedored SOWETWlMS At the Capitol that augurs well performance for his screen future. While the period of Surrender is that of 1917 and 1918 and the setting is a desolate prison camp on the icy shores of the Baltic, the war itself is merely an unseen and unheard, but tremendously important, background for the unusual love between the principals. Out of the bitterness of conflict, the despair of a girl who sees her fiance off to a front from which she instinctively knows he will never return, and the baffled hopes and repressed emotions of d prisoners. In Surrender. which opened yesterday at the Capitol theater, Warner Baxter again proves himself the superb actor. It is easily one of the most interesting films m his more than interesting career. The romantic Mr! Baxter, has always been one of this reviewer s secret screen weaknesses, and his performance of this difficult part, delightfully aided and abetted by Leila Hyams as will his Prussian sweetheart, boost him many notches in the estimation of picturegoers. C. Aubrey Smith makes an excellent contrast as the fiery old general, Alexander Kirkland, a newcomer to the screen, scoies heavily as Baxters German rival who has learned both tolerance and fatalism in the grim schcol of war, while Ralph Bellamy as for the stern commander of the BETTER COHTROL OF COLDS prison camp gives a gripping XOOOOOOOCCCOCOOOOO'JCOOOOOCCIOOOOOOOOO ? lb TOY AM FIMD OUT STolE SOW.EBOP BETCil A IT, NWAT WAPPEMED SWWaT LL with WAINtft BAXTER Leila Hyams Ralph Bellamy Romance extinguished the fires of hate and twa tortured souls found peace in the freedom of their love. 2 ton Bra la t TAJ v Til tari GREEN (JAPAN) TE fi M m iff VOW IN COST RU girl TEA TREE J OltODUC A N M 00 0$ 1OOO1OO1O KS 'B 00 00 00 A of sfca J co: 1 r Tfrice icn tto a I Ya ;imr family nnd tun-thifor lumllkl Nww enjoy "indoor tunshing" wU the C-mfford . , . 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Other Models "Om flai that money can buy SURPaiSlNG a1; BA of Give diem the finest THIS m Benito Mui'i'tr rtieu today a ter a sudden illness. i AT EAJ Ha world-wid- KAYE Cfr IT AMY PLATE MOW VO OOOOO 00 K (UR-Arn- 1 v : MUSSOLINI KIN DIES MILAN, Dec. 21. brother of Pfe.oir Mussolini, opw...a USEJOCK PLAN Attwattehs. I er out-of-to- THIS INCOME eye, fights. s get ar a tougia- - I found os A Members of the Logan Com mereial League outlined el gibility rules, completed orgai ization of the league and lai plans for the seasons Uy n a meeting held Sunday. .. Als Bike Shop was wted i as the eighth member 3f tli league while the U. X C.Jreigl station group and the'Servic Motor were allowed to ftombm to complete one other entry. It is highly probable that th games this year, whijh a1 to be played every Wednesda; starting on January 6, jwill I: played in the new Seventh war gymnasium. A final meeting before th season starts has been called fc next Sunday at 2 p .m. atrfvhir all eligibility lists will bp take up and a definite playin schedule completed. half-starve- SUPER-HETERODY- MOUSE b at a wh litl Jack bristles perceptibly when one suggests hi legs are wobtracts guaranteeing Max $200,-00- 0. bly Thats the strongest feature in my physical setup, he deExcept for the fact that clared. IWy legs are as stiong bouts, the shortest route and springy as they weie during over which Schmeling will agree championship days. V.'hat I r.i to defend their title, are illegal worrying about is tinung of my in Illinois, and the fact that blows. Thats what comes back neither Lewis nor any other slowest. This last swing through intelligent matchmaker would the midwest helped me quite a guarantee $200 000 for a match bit m that respect. unlikely to draw half that The old Manassa mauler was amount, Jacobs has a good down to 194 pounds and looked story. surprisingly fit. He will leave for Reno, Nev., next Monday Xmas cable Europe $1. Special rates. and. after a week of relaxarion city and in the divorce capita', will re- Christmas blanks-- Western UnD23 turn to Chicago ion. i CU3 ntmg the far better workouts. COMP1.ft.TE ' 21 cipher that out and, as a result, had i tow Pines - EXCITED CNeH YES: Mol A SIGM Dec CITY, A ru (UP) Blosser GEE OSTAO k peuSG .HxiQe (UP'-- - Arthur (Wuttaman) Shires admittedly is a braggart, but unlike many athletes of his kind, Texus makes the eurley-heade- d his boasts good. Wlien Shues, who talked himself into the bad graces of tin Chicago White Box and Washington Senators, was sent to the Milwaukee American association club last year, he modestly that he was too good a ball player fur the minor leagues." Ill show up this league, lie said, and I'll toe back m tnc big leagues next year. These pitchers cant 6top me. How well Shires lived up to his promises is shown by official American association batting average, released today, wlucn reveal the Milwaukee first baseman as champion batsman of the league. Playing in 157 games. Shires pounded the ball for 210 sons hits and a 385 average. His hits included 5 doubles, eight triples and 11 homeruns and Ibis record enabled him to fulfill his threat to return to the The Boston major league. braves ptuchamd Shires at the close of the tttl season and he will open the 1092 season as joice when Col. McLemo returnregular first baseman for the ed to the job Boston Braves. when things went Second, o wrong, as they were bound to to, the old Graffer would take all the blame, and Col. McLemo would come in for a reglorification upon his resumpBY Sf&NEY B. WHIPPLE tion of duty. United frees Correspondent-(KncfThe Colonel made a few er-rors. He had understood that Hitting for Henry McLemore) our knowledge of sporting matNEW YORK, Dec. 21 (UP) ters was confined to reporting, a, When Col. McLemore of blow by blow, the daisy chain grand Marshal of the rites at vassar and similar intiSports Parade, decided recently mate amusements. The thought to take a vacation and do a our Intel est in the more virile httle strutlng back home in the sports, su-- h as tossing the saber south, where he was toawn, or horse fighting in the antibes, it was his own suggestion that was purely academic. your correspondent assume h:s error is that, in The daily task. this yulctide season, there is There were two reasons he no necessity of commenting on said behind your correspondent's football, baseball tennis, golf, back, why old Gaffer Whipple or other outdoor acwas the best bet to conduct the swimming tivities because the whole world column. has suddenly gone berserk over First, he pointed out; the bridge. By the time the Ton-tra- ct editors and customers would retables are swept off and put away it will be spring, tra-l- a, and Col. McLcmoie wall have happily returned By LAKE The golden harvest of exhibition touts will lure Jack Dempsey, former heavyweight champion, eastward again early in January. Dempsey returned to Salt Lake to spend Christmas week with his mother, Mrs. Cecelia He . was - worn out Dempsey. from the strain of two and three bouts a week and incessant train rides The foimer title holder hint-i- d that King Levins ky, who pounded out a decision ovr Tommy Lough ran the otlier night, may be one of lus opponents on his next tour. That Chicago fish peddler can sock Dempsey obseived. I may take hrm on in a snort tamt next month Dempsey completed hu hundredth exhibition since he started back tne thorny comeback trail when his tour yicled at Fargo, S. D. and this last tour comprising 20 bouts, has done far more towards bringing him back to something approximating his former physic perfection than his western swing. "As you work east, Dempsey 21 With football out of the way upand the silly season of sport on us, Jack Curley, head Mahou of the Wrestling Trust, and Joe Jacobs, boxing current ringmaster are vieing for attention.exPromoter Curley has an cellent opportunity tonight to change the wrestling lineup for tne season when Jim Londos defends his world heavyweight Ray against championship Steele at Madison Square Garden for the steenth time. A Steele victory would vary the monotony. But there is httle that Curley plans to transfer leadership of his herd. Steele generally is conceded to be a better wrestler than Lon-rfbut he lacks the master poseur's color. Joie Jacobs ballybull is devoted to prospects of a championship match between Max Schmeling and Mickey Walker. match The Schmeling-Walkis signed, sealed and safe insofar as the two fighters and their managers are concerned but Herr Jacobs is having great difficulty in locating a promoter for the tontest.- He originally attempted to stampede the garden into accepting the match by the claim that he was offered $290,000 for the match m Los Angeles. Just at present, Jacobs is broadcasting an announcement that Nate Lewis, Chicago stadium matchmaker, will be in town today ready to sign con- f t 1 Wrestling Moguls Seek Limelight I SILT LIKE 111 1 Don't handicap your set. One a year, at laaat, renew y r tubes with RCA Re hot roiig give your and et the chance t effer you better radio reception. Tubes Tested FREE! Complete With Tubes. j jPRCQLtf perma-men- t, more beautiful or such an everyday reminder of the giver than a Hotpoint Percolator or Urn set. Their graceful design and lus- L trous beauty make them fit t appointments grace the finest tables Then, too, they are Ia- mous for the fragrant,,,1 Hotpoint ' p coffe they make Bets range from ' $17 00 to $65 80. Percolators and Urns, $9 95 to fulL-flavor- Hot-Dr,- $6 50. Cache Valley Electric Opposite Hotel Eccles Logan, u E0 |