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Show PROVO , (UTAH) EVENING HERALD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 193 5 PAGE THREE Six Mo re G ridm en Report At B. Y. U.; Squad at 39 Now Robert Wilson, Transfer From Idaho Nor- mai, is Fullback rossiDinty; lyoz Freshmen Report An enlarged squad greeted Coach G. Ott Romney Thursday morning when he took chalk and blackboard in the Little Theater to put his Brigham Young university uni-versity football players through a skull session. One veteran of last year's squad, two promising sophomores, a junior college transfer and two freshmen players of 1932, reported report-ed to the Cougar camp to swell the squad total to 39. Men will be three and four deep in every position. Robert Wilson, a 180-pound fullback from Idaho Normal at Albion, is the junior college addition. addi-tion. Wilson was an all-intur-inountain fullback in 1932. played end one year, and was a standout stand-out at both positions. The returning squad man is Wayne Cook, tackle, who weighed in at 194 pounds Wednesday and looks fit. Cook should give Tea, Verney, Waldo, Asay,. Blackham and the new Hanks, a battle for a Lambert , man, Ted reguia r tackle berth Sophomores Report A pair of likely looking sophomore sopho-more candidates are .Jack Stnng-ham, Stnng-ham, 169 pound fullback, and Gerald Ger-ald (Jillospie, guard, who weighs 190. Both are tough hombres on the gridiron Tield The red-thatched red-thatched player made an excellent impression on the frosh team last year, having plenty of physical courage and an aptitude for carrying carry-ing the ball. Gillespie is a brother of George Gillespie, regular guard of 1934, hut is considerably h ;iv-ier. ;iv-ier. Cerdell Pace, former Carbon county player, w;m was on th-"Y" th-"Y" freshman team ;n 3 932 at fullback, reported for a suit Wednesday, Wed-nesday, along with Hughes, ex-Springville ex-Springville man, who played end on the 19.34 freshman squad Pair weighs 170; Hughes goes 158 Prospects for effective kiiking this year are getting brighter as the practice goes forward. Clyde ' CHECK BATTERY, 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. ATLAS backed PEP88J GASOLINE a m mm am ' m. m 0J Greenwell. who recently shed his I Provo Timp baseball suit for the ! grid cleats, again looks like the answer to a. coach's prayer in several sev-eral departments. Greenwell can kick as well as pass, he has dem-! dem-! onstrated, and may fit into the i regular left halfback position because be-cause of his prowess. Greenwell is one of the best natural passers in the history of B. Y. U. teams and is a triple threat man of the ' Bliss Hoover type. Punting Well Alva Jenson and Ralph Crow-ton, Crow-ton, two more sophomores, are showing ability at punting, along witii Greenwell. Both handle the ball well and have been getting ' distance with their kicks. ; Coach Romney has already begun be-gun to stress speed in getting the ball away and insists on his punt-. punt-. ers practicing with snapperbacks in order to correlate distance and height with a quick getaway. Approximately 30 players will be taken to the first game with Montana State at Bozeman. Sept "'S The squad will leave Provo the morning of September 25 and nturn Sunday night. The remainder of the schedule: Oct. i (ireeley State at Proo. Ort. 19 Colorado College at l'ro o. Nov. I l niersitv of I tab at Provo. Nov. 9 Western State at iunni-son. iunni-son. Nov. If! I'tah Auiiiex at Logan. Nov. I'.i Arizona State Teachers Teach-ers at Phoenix. JUKI RIKS FAVORS LOl IS SAN FRANCISCO. Sept 12 U P James .1 Jet! ties, former world heavyweight champion. today picked Joe Louis to defeat Max Baer when the two meet in a 15-I'.illl'i 15-I'.illl'i battle Although he has never' seen Louis fight, Jeffries said he favored favor-ed the negro because "I have no Contideiiee ill Baer." "Why Max punches like an oil TO THE MANY Jt&lCC SERVICES OFFERED AT THE HUNDREDS OF PEP 88 AND Vfcb SERVICE STATIONS ' -v j ijvv -hj CHECK TIRES.FILLRADIATOR.VACUUM CAR, WASH Have You Tried Our Systematized Service? To give your car more careful attention. Pep 88 Vico service ser-vice men follow this systematized plan: Clean windshield Inquire your needs Supply gasoline Clean rear window and tail-light Check tires and shackles Test spare tire Clean headlights A Complete Line of High Quality Products TIRES AND BATTERIES . . . Strictly first-line, first-quality tires and batteries, by the strongest guarantees ever written. Sell for less because they're dis tributed more economically. PEP 88 SUPERFUEL . . . seasonably adjusted for finest performance. VICO MOTOR OIL . . . gives economical lubrication lubri-cation always. UTAH OIL REFINING COMPANY Hundreds of Service Dean, 'Hubbell Meet On Mound In Series Start Two Mightiest Pitchers Tangle Tan-gle As Giants and Cards Go Into Battle. NEW YORK, Sept. 12 dH j Baseball stakes were high today j as the St. Louis Cardinals and j New York Giants plunged into their final climatic series, which well may determine the National eague pennant winner. The pressure was on- the Cardinals Car-dinals from two directions. They not enly have tight ott the cnai- t lenge of the third-place Giants but must gain an edge in the 4-game ! series to defend their lead against the Chicago Cubs. j Cuts Have Chance i An even break won't help either the Giants or Cards. In the event of a standoff, the Cubs, only one: game back of the Cards, have a: chance to for ge to the top by ! sweeping the series with Brooklyn. ' The Giants, thr ee and a half -games j from the lead, must sweep the! series to pass the Cardinals. Two ot the National league's j mightiest pitchers were slated to', wor k today Dizzy Dean, with 25 victories and 8 defeats, against : Carl Hubbell. with 21 victories and 9 defeats. '' The Cards knocked off the Phil- lies. 10-2. yesterday as Paul Dean) wi ti his ISth game The Cubs over- ; whelmed the Braves, 15-3, for their ,sth straight victory. Pittsburgh; won from the Giants, 10-7. Kiki j Cuylrr's homer- with a man on was . Cincinnati's winning margin in a; 7-4 victory over Brooklyn. A 5 r un rally in the ninth gave : Cleveland a 5-4 victory over the New York Yankees. Washington j nosed out Detroit 4-3 in 12 innings. ; Sad Sam Jones won his 6th game j i,r the season by pitching the Chi-; cago White Sox to a 10-2 victory : over the Boston lied Sox. j Yesterday's Hem: Paul Warier', j win, made a homer with the uas-'s j filled, a triple and two singles, to I drive in six runs as Pittsburgh' beat New York. 10-7. 1 woman." he said. ' He's about the worst I ever saw. If Louis is half as good as they say he is then he's ilUe to Will." 8. Fill radiator 9. Check oil 10. Inspect fan-belt and oil filter 11. Examine spark plugs if desired 12. Fill battery 13. Clean out car 14. Thanks1. Come again Stations and Dealers in Utah and AGGIES' GRID SQUAD STRONG LOGAN Utah State Aggies football training camp opened here Tuesday with forty husky gridders answering Coach E. L. "Dick" Romney's call. The Aggie mentor seemed well pleased with the first day's showing and announced an-nounced the boys were to get plenty of hard work right from the start. He livel up to this statement state-ment by giving offensive formations forma-tions only a few minutes after the first practice session got under way. Headed by Captain Clayton "Tate" Wrardell, two year veteran and triple-threat halfback, Utah State hopes to place another title contending football team in the conference race. Ex-Captain Elmer El-mer Ward and Thatcher Handley were the two regulars lost from last year's squad and their two posts will be extremely hard to plug up. Ward was the first ail-American ail-American from Utah State while Handley was considered as a great blocker and defensive man. Fill Ward's Place In the list of center candidates Elvin "Tarzan" Wayment, former Ogden high school star, seems to be the pick at least right now although Lloyd Elder, understudy to Ward for the last two campaigns, cam-paigns, may win the position through his varsity experience. Willard Skousen, Arizona youth and sensational fullback from 1934 s frosh, is favored by the second-guessers to take over the fullback duties. The Arizonian is speedy, aggressive, and has a powerful build which should help in landing the post. Ted Lockyer, a man who shared the fullback berth with Handley, reports in the best condition of his career. The other nine positions seem to be reasonablyxsafe but, with a host of newcomers; anything can be looked forTieTore the season opens. Regulars who are favored are: ends, Whitesides and Bunker; tackles, Wade and Simmons; guards, Peterson and White; quarterback, quar-terback, Rasmussen; halfbacks, and Wardell. A scar e has been throwm into the camp through the failure of Kent Ryan and Bob Bunker to report. However, both are expected within with-in the next few days. The American Indian, using his birch bark canoe, chased and captured cap-tured whales long before the white man came. WINDOWS ETC. SERVICE Idaho Alibi Absent As Fred Perry Takes Licking World Champion Knows How To Lose As Well As Win; Allison Brilliant. By HENRY McLEMORE United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Sept. 12 iU.K One of the truest tests of a champion, cham-pion, they say, lies in how he takes a licking. If that be so, then Fred Perry of England, top man in tennis throughout the world for the past two years, is a real champion. His years of riding on top never made him forget how to accept graciously a defeat. It was a tough match to lose, that one he dropped to Wilmer Allison in the semi-finals of the national tournament yesterday. It cost him, among other trrffigs, a chance to win the American championship cham-pionship three years in a row and retire the big and valuable cup. Yet. if he rnmnlaincii it was not I while the tennis writers were within earshot. After the match, Perry minimized mini-mized his injury in the seventh game of the first set and paid high tribute to his conquerer. Makes No Kick "I've got no grouse," he said. "I had a licking coming to me, and unlucky for me, it came two days too soon. Wilmer played magnificently." magnifi-cently." That Perry's injury hurt his chances no thinking man denied. He's too fine a tennis player to lose to any player in the world in straight sets. Mind you, I said straight sets. I don't think Perry, on his finest day, could have beaten beat-en the Allison of yesterday. He was in the same sort of spell that descended on Ellsworth Vines in 1932 when he blasted Henri Cochet of France, then the No. 1 player of the world, to take j the title. Vines couldn't miss that j day and neither coul Allison yes-jterday. yes-jterday. On normal days Allison I has to allow himself a sort of : working edge, but against Perry i he hit right out for the lines j and hit them nearly every time, j If he plays even two-thirds as I well today, he'll smother the Sid-j Sid-j ney Wood who played Bryan I Grant yesterday. Wood was so ; unsure of himself against Bitsy i that he discarded his normal game entirely and played pat ball. It ; made for a most horrendous spectacle, spec-tacle, for Grant plays pat ball to i end pat ball. Certainly, the na-! na-! tional championship never has seen such a semi-final. The boys employed a sort of sickly half lob, and their rallies, many of which saw the ball float lazily back and forth across the net as many as '20 times, nearly drove the custom-! custom-! ers daffy. Nobody blamed Grant, for that's the natural game of the tiny At-lantan. At-lantan. But for Wood, one of (he finest shotmakers in the world to resort to such a game was-well, was-well, lets' say it was er, uh aggravating a the verv dickens. (Copyright 1935 by United Press) GEORGE BOWS TO O'MAHONEY BOSTON. Sept. 12 r.f! Danno j O'Mahoney of Ireland established himself as undisputed wrestling i champion of the world last night ! when he tossed Ed Don George of Java, N. Y.. after 2 hours, 5 ; seconds of wrestling. O'Mahoney, who won the title from George in a protested bout i here in July, scored the only fall if the repeat performance with his famed "Irish whip." Just before be-fore the fall George crippled his right shoulder when he missed the Irishman with a flying tackle and hit a steel ring post. O'Mahoney was the aggressor throughout the bout and showed a skill at a variety of holds. The wrtstlers cuffed and straight-armed straight-armed each other on numerous occasions, and in one heated exchange ex-change Danno knocked out one of George's front upper teeth. Wrestling: Results . . jj. By UNITED PRESS At Los Angeles Vincent Lopez, threw Ernie Dusek, Omaha; Man Mountain Dean, Georgia, threw Jack Washburn, Texas; Paul Bosch. Los Angeles, drew with Nick Lutze, Venice, Cal.; Wee Willie Davis, Oakland, drew with Ivan Manganoff,. Bulgaria; Al Bi-signano, Bi-signano, Italy, threw Fred Cor-ano, Cor-ano, Italy; Babe Zaharias, Pueblo, Colo., threw Harry Ezikian, Los Angeles. Boston Danno O'Mahoney, Ireland, Ire-land, threw Ed Don George, Java, Y. O'Mahoney retained heavyweight heavy-weight title); Ed Strangler Lewis Los Angeles, threw Dick Davis-court, Davis-court, California. TILDEN PLAYS TODAY NEW YORK, Sept. 12 U.F The American professional tennis championships moved into the second and third rounds today with all the seeded entrants still in the running. William T. Tilden, who was idle yesterday, makes his tournament bow today against James Kenney of New York in a second round match. Tilden Is seeded first. Eighty per cent of a movie film manufacturing plant is in complete darkness during working hours. Women Golfers In Home Stretch CHICAGO, Sept. 12 OJ.R) The 72-hole women's western golf derby entered the home stretch today with Patty Jane Berg, Minneapolis, leading by a single stroke with 245. In second place was Marion Miley, Lexington, Ky., girl who has won five major championships this year. Miss Miley. who trailed Miss Berg by five strokes at the halfway mark, shot a par 79 yesterday for a 54 hole total of 246. Marion McDougall, Portland, Ore., the first day's leader, had another bad round yesterday and ended up with a total of 260. L- A. GIRL WINS PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 12 l.R -Patricia Henry, of Los Angeles, Calif., won the national girls' junior jun-ior lawn tennis championship today to-day defeating Elena Ciconne, of Boston, Mass., in straight sets, 6-3, 8-6. t ! 1 -jt iri: y - - - " j "V -v--- ... . ., --r-' j 1 j -j' r- -r: r gli z- q " ' tv ' I v "x " j j v -j - J : Aj 'r'5fc - ..v - HtRt ARtTHtONES TO SE-E-TWiS PALI LOOK! . . . the three major sports for the Fall Season. Sea-son. Interesting, original sport models. . . . Double or Single-breasted, pleated or vented coats ... an array of smartness by those master stylists HART SCHAFFNER & MARX IF JILIL) American League Standing of the Teams W. L. Pet. Detroit 86 47 .647 New York 78 54 .591 Cleveland 69 66 .511 Boston 68 68 .500 Chicago 65 66 .496 Washington 58 76 .433 St. Louis : ... 56 77 .421 Philadelphia 51 77 .398 Wednesday's Results Cleveland 5, New York 4. Chicago 10, Boston 2. Detroit 3, Washington 4 (12). St. Louis-Philadelphia, previously previous-ly played. National League . Standing of the Teams W. L. Pet. St. Louis 86 49 .637 Chicago 87 52 .626 New York 81 51 .614 Pittsburgh 78 61 .561 Brooklyn 61 72 .459 VARSITY TOWN AND CHEER LEADER FALL SUITS 2250 2 $2750 SEE OUR WINDOWS RIVER Style Leadership Cincinnati 59 79 .428 Philadelphia 56 78 .418 Boston 33 99 .250 Wednesday's Results New York 7, Pittsburgh 10. Brooklyn 4, Cincinnati 7. Boston 3, Chicago 15. Philadelphia 2, St. Louis 10. 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