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Show PAGE FIVE ROMNEY UITS FOIR FOO in n ALL DRILL (2- PROVO (UTAH) EVENING HERALD, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 1, 1 9 3 5 TTTfc IXC Th ree Junior College Men Brighten Prospects Of 1935 Cougar Eleven Pehrson Wins First "Derby" Up Steep Hill; Squad Appears Better Balanced, With About Same Weight BY J. K. PAULSON The football "derby" mantle of former Captain Max Warner of the iBrigham Young university football team, Tuesday fell on two men, George Pehrson, and Reed Crane, both ends. Coach Ott Rorhney introduced this derby several years ago as a training stunt and liked it so well that he has maintained it as a daily feature of the hardening process. pro-cess. It consists oi a run up the steep hill that flanks the "Y" stad- ! ium seats, and it's a man builder. Pehrson and Crane ran a dead heat tip the hill Tuesday in the first training session, with the rest of the 31 -man squad only a step behind. Warner, who left Tuesday night to join the St. Louis American league professional team, won the derby last year every time save one, when Pehrson Pehr-son nosed him (.ut. The previous year Pete Wilson was a consistent winner. Hold Drill The derby was only ,t sidelight of the initial drill, which started out with light calisthenics and wound up with body contact and work with the charging machine. It's early predictions. to make any accurate yet conclusions are after a look at the conclusion is that the inevitable squad. One team should be another is that better balanced; reserve strength should be hewer: a third is that the backfield should indeed go places. And there's potential power on that line Paced by Vorn Waldo. 192 pound tackle, and several other veterans, the forward wall won't have to apologize for lack of fight or brawn It is mainly a question of whipping into shape a half dozen doz-en sophomores There is no crying by Coach Romney and his aides because the .squad will be only 33-men strong, s compared with the half hundred r mere of the I'mversnv of I'tah and I'tah Aggies. Nor will the .vailing wall be used to bemoan the :act that the team is no heavier .ban last year- Kvervorn- knows .he story of the Columbia Lions, and everyone admits that the proper- balance and talent, a 33-man 33-man squad can be as good as a nO-pound squad. The team should average letween 1T" and IK'J pouiuLs per man. Several talented junior college men repot ted for suits Tuesday to Thursday - Friday - Saturday brighten the Cougar outlook. Ted Banks, 190-pound tackle, and Ronald Ron-ald Hale, 164-pound end, from the University of Idaho, Southern Branch, were on the field. Both have excellent reputations. A third prospect is V'erl Merrick, 160-pound 160-pound halfback from Snow Junior College. Issues Suits Suits were issued Tuesday morning by Coach Romney, who adhered strictly to the conference rule by waiting until the exact date. September 10, before getting started. Suits were issued at the Ute and Aggie camps Monday, newspaper reports stated. Only three men failed to appear and they are expected soon. They are Jack Stringham. battering fullback; Wayne Cook, big tackle, and Gerald Gillespie, guard, who will attempt to grab one of the positions vacated when his brother George, and Max Warner were graduated last spring. Jack Woodward, compactly built quarterback, a passing expert has kept in shape during the summer sum-mer by playing softball three nights a week for his native city, Salida, Solorado. Vern Waldo worked on the Salt Lake City playgrounds then pitched hay and grain on a ranch for two weeks as a preliminary training. Walter Lyons, quarterback, has fought forest fires in Montana. Others on the squad are bronzed and hard from summer activities. Weights of the men reporting were checked as follows: Mac Johnson. 182; Melvin Wheeler, 177; Melvin Kavatchevich. 148; Vaughn Lloyd. 170; Dan Thomas. 166; LeRay Alexander, 172; Golden Taylor, 182; Vern Waldo, 192; LeGrande Tea. 200; Bert Asay, 16: Ted Hanks. 190: John Verney. 225; Clifton Brimhall, 170; George Pehrson. 159: Earl Giles, 170. Wayne Soffe. 185; Jack Woodward, Wood-ward, 153; Walter Lyons, 185; Gerald Simmons. 164; Clyde Green well. 153: Meldon Warner, 178; Howard McKinney, 165; Alva Jensen. 162: Lincoln Gardner, 169; Carlyk Lambert. 169; Reed Crane, 15: Ronald Hale. 164; Alfred Canning. 145; Ralph Crowton, 184; Frank Wright. 1U9; Verl Merrick, 160. 1 1 is illegal o sell gasoline in Stockholm, unless it is mixed with alcohol. Last Times 'ITpdav SALLY EILERS in "ALIAS MAKY IX) W" OP SlS arou th ;.a"D-ugA 9a ter"t ' ' ' tht arry of gFeat P'cturc" Giants, Cards Bolster Teams For Big Drive Cards Send For Pitchers to Aid In Stretch Race; Giants Hitting Better NEW YORK, Sept. 11 U.R -New York and St. Louis are bolstering bol-stering their lineups for a driving finish in the National league race. The third-place New Yorkers, who seem to be clicking again after blowing the nine-game lead they held in July, already have Harry Gumbert, former Baltimore International league pitcher ready for duty. The Cards have dispatched emergency em-ergency orders to Lyle Judy, shortstop from Springfield, Mo., and Bill McGee and Nelson Potter, Pot-ter, Houston pitchers. Judy, who set a Western association base-stealing base-stealing record this season, may be used as a pinch-runner and the two new pitchers probably will be used for relief worn. The Giants, only 21-.- games from the top, finally have started to fight from behind instead of laying down and calling it a day. Manager Bill Terry is beaming because: 1. Mel Ott, who had gone hit-less hit-less 26 times at bat, made two j blows yesterday. ; 2. Gus Mancuso, who hadn't hit I in 17 times up, got a single. ! 3. Gumbert is ready for duty I and might put some life into an (ailing pitching staff. Terry plans to use Gumbert, ; who is a ringer for Daffy Dean, ! in the St. Louis series starting j tomorrow. He will take the spot I filled by Fred Fitzsimmons, who I hasn't returned to form after a i long layoff because of a chipped bone in his throwing arm. The Giants played top-notch baseball in taking a doubleheader , from Pittsburgh yesterday, 4-3 j and 4-2. The Cards, with a j three-run rally in the eighth, de-: de-: feated Philadelphia 4-2 to stay a jgame ahead of Chicago's Cubs, I who defeated Boston. 4-0. Brook-; Brook-; lyn defeated Cincinnati, 4-1. Tn the American league, the De-! De-! troit Tigers had their lead chop-. chop-. ped to 7!v games by losing. ,6-0 to Washington, while the runner-up New York Yankees defeated defeat-ed Cleveland, 4-1. Boston's fourth place Red Sox drew to within a half a game of the third-place Cleveland Indians by defeating Chicago 4-3. St. Louis defeated : Philadelphia, 8-6. FIRST SERIES TIFF THURSDAY The fifth game of the Industrial league championship series will be played at Provo if it is necessary, neces-sary, it was announced today by Albert Kirkpatrick. president of the club. When arrangements were made for the five-game series to decide the championship between Provo rimps and Gemmcli club. Prov I won the toss concerning th'- play-j play-j tug grounds of the fifth game, i The first game is scheduled for Thursday at 4:30 on the Bingham lot. The second one will be at Provo Sunday at 2:30, the third j Mm wit ax, Duiiictiii veunesaay at 4:30. The following Snnriav sr. tember 22. Provo will be the scene of the fourth contest. If a fifth is necessary it may be played that same afternoon as part of a doubleheader, or the following vv eunesaay. With Clyde Greenwell out of the' TODAY and THURSDAY ft CHALLENGE to Philo Vance, Charlie Chan and The Thin Man! 'RY and solve this murder MAN ALIVE who can do it ' Vi y Vex. Begins Sunday "ANNAPOLIS FAREWELL" OUR BOARDING trA YOU WNA. TND TVAfcM UNI NTEPESTNb AH 3UST SOrAE STATWPS YKNOW, "STUCK N A "BOOK -T TJOHS, SHT VEW MONOTDNOUS AFTER AWT, ALL ONE "DOES LOOK AT TYAfcrA t SO, 1 THOUGHT rVNAVBE. VOLTC H r nn v w LnJErS LOSING THIS TUfc-O-WAnR-- DIXON ENTERS PACIFIC MEET j Fred "Buck" Dixon, intermoun tain tennis champion, left ed-j i nesday afternoon for Los Angeles, I ' California, where he will take part I in the Pacific Southwest Tennis j I tournament, the meet which will , attract Fred Perry, national j i champion, and all the rest of the : world's great amateur stars. Mrs. j Dixon will make the trip also. 1 j At Peak Form ! ! Capitalizing on more than a de- j cade of experience in tournament j i competition, Dixon has reached the ! ! peak form of his career this year. ! He scorched the Salt Lake Tennis i ! club courts, in the intermountain j meet with his deadly chops to take j out Vernon John, Denver ace. then ; won in the finals handily from Tom Harper, Denver. Preliminary rounds for the pur-jktsc pur-jktsc o chosing--players ; for the j actual tournament on Sunday, will j begin Friday. As intermontain : champion, however, Dixon is ex- I pected to be entered in the tourna- merit without having to play in the preliminaries. One handicap Dixon faces is the difference in atmosphere in the light mountain atmosphere, but ! the denser air on the coast per- ' mits players to hit the ball flat. j Wilson Booth, Provo. and Tony : Sowards, Salt Lake City, former Brigham Young university tennis j team members, are leaving for j California aiid will watch part of j tne meet. picture because of the beginning of football practice, pitching duties fall upon Lefty Cole, Tom Jack son and Jimmy Hawkins entirely Cole will likely chuck the first i game Thiipsrfnv -mH vi n Hofiried advantage because he dishes from the port side. A meeting of the players and directors of the baseball club is scheduled for toingnt at tfte fire station, according to a call issued by Albert Kirkpatrick, president of the club. mystery ! There's only ONE . . . that's ichy they call him VIRGII1IA DRUCF J ADDED SKI SCRAPERS," Novelty SONG HIT STORY The Life of the Party Universal Talking News , V 4X " i ' 1 N i HOUSE TrV LKE THIS TUG -OV -WAR MEDAL. I WON 2 NSTTEAD OF TV S STAtWPe r (). Golf Meet In Fourth Round CLEVELAND, Sept 11 U.R Waller Emery, (Oklahoma City's brilliant former intercollegiate inter-collegiate champion, forged into the fourth round of the National Amateur Golf tournament tour-nament today with a hard fought victory over Roes Somervilie, dour Canadian. Emery won by one up in 19 holes. CLEVELAND. Sept. 11 (U.R) Sixty-four survivors of the opening open-ing rounds of the National Amateur Ama-teur golf tournament made ready to tee off in the third and fourth rounds today and by nightfall the field of 207 original starters will be reduced to 16. Unless form of the week does a complete dipsy-doo, the 16 places in Thursday's matches will be filled fill-ed by players figured in advance as having reasonable chances of winning the title. Two Out of Running- As it stood this morning, only two players rated by the experts of having real chances were out ! of the running. These were Johnny Fischer of Cincinnati and Zell Eaton of Oklahoma City Fischer, former intercollegiate champion, was one of the casualties casual-ties of Tuesday's second round. Eaton, a lower scorer in the national na-tional qualifying tests, had been figured a probable smei-finalist. Lawson Little, who is seeking his fourth consecutive major amateur ama-teur title, has seemed in tests thus far leagues ahead of his rivals. In yesterday's second round Little swarmed all over William V. Lain. Chicago undertaker, despite a brief birdie splurge by Lain. Probably the best match of the day will be that of Walter Emery ! of Seattle vs. rtoss aomerviue oi : Canada. u,merv. one me iow scorers ot tne quaiuying iei.3, was uue lor a reai iesi wim oum- erville who won the title m lvsz. and who has played some impressive im-pressive golf in the first two rounds. National League Standing of Teams W. L. Pet. .634 .623 .618 .558 .462 .423 .421 .252 St. Louis 85 Chicago 86 New York 81 Pittsburgh 77 Brooklyn 61 Cincinnati 58 Philadelphia 56 Boston 33 49 52 50 61 71 79 77 98 Tuesdays' Results New York 4-4. Pittsburgh 3-2. Brooklyn 4, Cincinnati 1. Boston 0. Chicago 4. Philadelphia 2, St. Louis 4. American League j Standing of Teams W. L. Pet. Detroit 86 46 .652 New York 78 53 .595 Cleveland 68 66 .507 Boston 68 67 .504 Chicago 64 66 .492 Washington 57 76 .429 St. Louis 56 77 .421 Philadelphia 51 77 .398 Tuesday's Results White Fawn Mill & Elevator Company CITY FEED STORE 151 NO. UNIV. AVE PHONE 114 UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT Wholesale and Retail Dealers in White Fawn Flour -Grains - Dairy and Poultry Feeds - Hay - Straw and ALL KINDS OF MILL STUFFS Will Exchange Flour for Wheat "White Fawn Leads Them Air A. Mabey, Manager Leo F. Thurman. Asst. Mgr. BY AHERN -oohJncvAA TX TT AWM STAMP QOLLECnON V3 "BETTER. ITS "FUN STAMPS WYTHj OTHER KVDS ! v. TF VT WAS A "BATTLESHIP NEDAU, I WOULD -wBLrr not "FOR ONLY A WAR TU3 31 -4 i- BULLDOG GRID TEAM HEAVIER Beef and speed are evident on the Provo high school football team as the Bulldog gridders go into their second week of practice. prac-tice. The team will average from three to five pounds per man heavier this year than did the 1934 eleven. Backfield power and speed is also indicated in the workouts at the new North park field. Competition is in the offing for the Bulldogs within 10 days. Co-coaches Co-coaches Glen Simmons and Ike Young have lined up a game with South high of Salt Lake City, September 20, and with Jordan high September 27. The Jordan game, however, depends on the Region Three schedule. It will be shifted if it should interfere with, a possible game with a Utah county team. The Region Three schedule will be drown up by the coaches probably prob-ably on September 18, on the same night as the rules meeting. BAHRAM IS WINNER DONC ASTER, Eng., Sept. 11 (UP, Bahram, the Aga Khan's undefeated un-defeated champion, achieved the rare "triple crown" of the British turf today when he won the St. Leger stakes, last of the season's claasics. Solar Ray was second and Buckleigh third. The great thre-year-old, considered con-sidered one of the outstanding thoroughbreds of this century, romped home over the field of eight, winning by five lengths. Detroit 0, Washington 6. St. Louis 8, Philadelphia f. Cleveland 1. New York 4. Chicago 3, Boston 4. Logging rOVQP NEEDS OUR "TONIC!" Don't let a logy motor down-heart you! We have the prescription for restoring its pep! Something's wrong! when a motor loses its snap. More may develop if you delay! Usually a little expert "tuning" "tun-ing" is all that's needed. Stop by, we'll tell you quickly just what's wrong. Telluride Motor Co. rnmnlAtv Krviee All Makes of Service All Cars Phone 1000 Provo, Utah GRANT SPOILS HENRY'S MARK "BUsy" Keeps Winning in Singles; McLemore Fears Loss of His Record By Henry McLemore United Press Staff Sorrespondent NEW YORK. Sept. 11 Ul! You know, it looks as if a little peanut-sized guy with a weather-beaten weather-beaten face, a mop of crazy hair, and who wears a pair of dirty duck pants which are always threatening to fall off, may up and besmirch a record of mine which the greatest athletes In the world haven't been able even to threaten. The little shrimp is Bryan Grant, a sawed-off tennis player who works out of Atlanta, Ga., and the record of which I speak is the one I hold for picking losers I haven't tabbed a winner since I named Grant at Vicksburg, but it looks as if Grant is out to spoil my perfect average. The rebel rascal went out yesterday and beat Donald Budge to move into the semi-finals of the national tennis championship, and today is but two steps removed from the title. Henry P'oked Him If he should win it, I'm sunk, for I picked him to do it. I don't suppose you remember when I did, but it was a month or so ago. Grant just pats the ball back and forth like a fellow playing ping pong. Watching him play for the first time you'd swear you could beat him- But brother, he's a tough un to beat. He'll keep knocking that ball back at you until you become so exasperated you'll wind up and knock it anywhere, just to ed the monotony. He nearly ran Budge crazy. No matter where Budge slammed the ball, Bitsy would run over and get it. Finally, after a half dozen of his Sunday shots had been returned, Budge would 131IAHS ACEEIr 1 Pflfl AH fl Pixnfprp Test Here's Luc& Against Whiskies Costing Up to vimffnpp Air Mnnnnn u WUlLlL MSNyiLinl AUTH1NTIC PBE-WHlvAY ACCEPT this challenge yourself, i. and you will see why we do not hesitate to offer it ! In HERE'S LUCK a 65-year-old distillery brings you an authentic Pre-War type blend. Just as we blended great whiskies which connoisseurs preferred, before Prohibition, Pro-hibition, so we blend HERE'S LUCK today. Its fine base, selected for its rich mellow flavor, is blended with none but selected neutral whisky, spe. get so anoyed he'd wind up and try to kill the ball. Sometimes he did, but more often he knocked it into the rough or sent it sizzling into the net. And Grant, with a sympathetic shake of his head, would skip back to the baseline to start another bit of bedeviling. I'm afraid he's going to whip Sidney Wood today and get into the final with either Perry or Allison on Thursday. If he does well bang goes my record. You know, a man sorta hates to see ?. lifetime of work destroyed in on fell swoop, as the boys call it (Copyright, 1935 by United Press) Wrestling" Results By UNITED PRESS NEW YORK Gino Garibaldi. Italy. pinned Floyd Marshall, Arizona. At San Francisco Man Mountain Moun-tain Dean, Georgia. t?w Count Huo De Collelmo, Italy; Matros Kirilenko, Greece, defeated the Scorpion, Hollywood; Sandor Szabo, Hungary, threw Cy Wil liams, Florida; Len Macaluso, ex-Colgate, ex-Colgate, defeated Wee Willie Davis, Virginia: Alphonse Bisig-nano, Bisig-nano, Italy, defeated Bob Russell. New Orleans; Stanley Pinto, Chicago, Chi-cago, drew with Blue Sun Jennings, Jen-nings, Oklahoma. UNION BUS DEPOT Interurban Station Denver . $ 8.00 St. George 5.55 St. Louis 20.75 Los Ang. 10.00 Chicago . 21.50 S'n Diego 12.25 Tw. 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