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Show got the stuff to stay. Those boys will pin his ears back. Wilhelm stayed until Uncle Sam went in to pinch-hit. You know what happened. A home run with the bases full. If Hitler Hit-ler remembers that game I think he will come up with a sore arm. Anyway, In- is stealing the headlines from Galena Hays Al. can see it, stretch out as lowl f a billiard table, and in the background stand tht.se ever present sentinels. the Rockv Mountains, The silence is impressive im-pressive and then suddenly the quiet is shattered as someone yells, "here he conies". You look off to the south and you catch sight of a black dot on the horizon. Before you can bat your eyes this man-made monster of speed flashes into the measured mile. Your head turns as on a pivot as the car fades into the distance. 1 Sports Here h and There it By Ai Ablett A( ' r jo, Ablett gels up early to f quick at Wendover; Rales 'Vi. 0tt as minor leaguer and ir picks winners of tomorrow yankee Doodle went to town i a pony and John Cobb went E' a town Wednesday at dawn m Cft .jj Railton Red Lion, and I 1 lean hi' u t'nt t0 town- t s arcl ,,rone to conceive of a machine iided by man to travel at a peed of '" tier than six miles W; minute, but that is what this 1 ; English fur broker .did in setting - iat mik' record at 369.74 miles 2 -hour- , . . , ibis, my Inends, w an trn-! trn-! ;ressiv'e sight. The gleaming salt J jjts at dawn, as far as the eye You catch your breath, the announcement comes over the loud speaker that the record has been broken. Then you realize that you have seen man travel faster than anyone has ever done before on land. Yes, folks, it is worth the trip. Lou Ambers is again lightweight light-weight champion of the world. It is true that Armstrong lost five rounds for low blows, but if the radio account of the fight is correct, he only had a winning margin in one of those rounds. Ambers won the others, anyway. They meet again for the welterweight welt-erweight championship, and I believe be-lieve Amber; again will he the winner. The ad.U J weight will make Armstn.iu'. a little slower, and he needs all of his speed against a jiti-rUa: like Aml-rs. The next hi;; li-ht on the docket dock-et is Lou No. a vs. Tony Gah-nto. I like Nova, as 1 hae said before. be-fore. I think the California boy has too much speed for Tony and he can take a punch and keep coming. This was proven m his fight with Baer. Don't let anyone any-one kid you, that big bulk from Livermore can't hit with that right hand. He hit Nova, but he shook them off and came on to win by a technical K. O. That is the way I pick this fight to end. Tony cuts easy, and in the city of Brotherly love they don't like the sight of too much blood. Nova, No-va, inside of 12. Provo, the dark horse in the Industrial league, has been coming com-ing in the stretch. I still say if either the Timps or Gemmell j could deliver good pitching this 1 second half will end in a tie. I see Dividend has sent a couple of their players lo one of their farms. Glen Berge and Steve Butler are to play with the Salt Lake Bees. They haven't helped much as the ! siingless Bees have dropped both games since the boys joined them. It looks like the batteries for today's game are Hitler, pitching, and Poland, catching. But John Bull, the umpire, is trying lo call the game. I hope he succeeds. You know some day this tellow Hitler is going lo get into the big lea gues and my guess is he hasn't i |