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Show PAGE SIX- PROVO (UTAH) EVENING-HER-AID, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2 9, 1 9 3 5 Go D ugars, Reserves rill To Prepare For Big Game Duty I , . S i - HITLERWINS BOUT INITIAL Stanford Kicks to Victory Over Huskies Young Hitler, his sharp face resembling a Siberian wolf after the 17-day diet, Monday night conquered Swede Lawson of Salt Lake City, in two out of three falls .without resortiner to the jn . n , iaiis jviLiiuuL resorting; 10 tne kecond, String Men, Only a Shade Behind iSScret4?old which he to Put f . ' a , " Backley in the hospital cue OlUllCfS in ADlllty, iUay Jriay Using a right hook to the body Big Part in U-Y Contest Simmons BY J. It. PAULSON Wh4le the regulars went through a dummy scrimmage to rest up from the bruising Wyoming Wyo-ming game Saturday, reserves of the Brigham Young university Scrimmaged with the tough freshmen in preparation for possible pos-sible duty against the University of Utah Redskins at the "Y" stadium sta-dium Saturday. Reserves will likely play an important im-portant part in the game which has the country side agog over its thousand and one possibilities. Utah reserves, even up to the third team, are little less effective ef-fective than the first team and the Cougar second sec-ond string men re better this year fore and aft than they have been for many a-season. a-season. Such backfield men as Gerald Simmons and Howard McKinney are likely to see action, judging from their performances recently, and George Pehrson, kickoff and place kick specialist, and Alva Jenson, long-distance punter, have already demonstrated their ability In the proper time and place. Vadal Peterson, Utah assistant coach, has scouted the Cougars in previous contests but since that time Coach Ott Romney has drilled the home club in a series of new plays devised to crack through the Ute defense. Although Utah has a fine pass defense, nevertheless the Cougars may lay considerable stress on an aerial attack at-tack to fight back the visitors from Salt Lake City. May Use Aerials Forward passes, starting with Jack Woodward and Walt Lyons, j and laterals in which the entire backfield might figure, will help make the game a spectacular affair. af-fair. Denver had little success with passes against the Utes, but the Pioneers were handicapped because be-cause they hadn't scouted the Redskins. Then too, , they . faced one of those bad days, when every-, thing they tried had a jinx on it and the Utes were 100 per cent "hot." In spite of the undoubted strength of Ike Armstrong's tribe, the boys in' red jersies are going to have some uneasy moments to say the least, in stopping the elusive elus-ive Paul McBeth, battering Jack Stringham and Meldon Warner, that low-running, deceptive ball carrier who skips off a tackier like Cs Alp Meets Neiisel i with a regularity that became irk some to the blonde Swede, Hitler lost the first fall for slugging but took the second with an arm strangle after knocking Referee Clifford to the floor, then took the third with a body press. In the windup bout, Henry Jones, Provo slammed Dick Anderson An-derson of Butte, Montana. Anderson Ander-son took the first fall with a scissors. scis-sors. Jones won the second in two minutes with a cradle and the third with a whip wristlock. Byron Boyd, Provo, knocked out John Sundbloom, Springville. in the second round of their scheduled sched-uled six-rounder, a bruising battle. Boyd sent Sundbloom down for nine counts with a vicious right nooK then followed with the knockout blow. A fast and furious bout between be-tween Homer Cooms, Springville, and Lou Petro, Provo ended in "no contest" after Petro was hurt in the third round. It was a spectacular spec-tacular bout. Roy Farley, Orem, had it all over Kid Healey, Provo in a three round bout which was called a draw. i.iuik yj..jwnpnm $i Pi. J i: 4g Si k i C X'-' ' v Tea PROVO WOMAN SHOOTS BUCK One of the finest set of antlers seen yet in the 1935 deer kills adorns the head of the buck shot by Mrs. Cecil Jones of Provo, who was in a party of hunters in the Clear Creek canyon region, near Kicntield. The big buck, which weiehed exactly 200 pounds, has six points on one side and five points on the other, making an imposing set of horns. Three fine animals were broue-ht in by Lester Moore, Mel Moore and Bob Cockrell, who hunted in the southern part of the state. It is Mel Moore's fifteenth consecutive consecu-tive successful deer hunt. J1 Spanish Fork Gridiron m Leads Region Three Clubs Into Final Stretch . , Provo Plays Payson At "Y" Stadium; Lehi Travels To Spanish Fork; Lincoln At P. G.; A. F. At Springville By a margin of two field goals Stanford university s football machine led bv the mirhtv tikk -son upset the dope in defeating Washington's greJt team 6-0 at Seattie Graven ZIL (56) Washington tackle. 3 ' "" ' stop uraysn Bud Brougha Provo, Payson Slate Practice Payson and Provo football teams will play on November 8 at Payson Pay-son in addition to the regular Region Re-gion Three game Friday at the "Y" stadium.. The game on November 8, however how-ever will be a special practice encounter en-counter in which only players eligible elig-ible next season will be permitted to engage. The contests will aid the younger young-er players in preparing fur next season by crystallizing the knowl-p(i?f knowl-p(i?f they have gained this year.. Danno Dumps Ed Don George After disposing of 1'aulino L'zcudun at Madison Square Gardr-n. Dec. K5, Joe Louis will regain out of competition until March, when he is expected to tackle the winner of the meet-ins meet-ins between Primo ' "Camera, above, and Walter N'eusel, blond German ehemist.v below. Camera and N'eusel collide at he Garden, Nov. 1. nOLL-YOUR-OWU EXPERT MAKES TWO HUE SMOKES IN TWELVE SECONDS a flat rock ricochets off the surface sur-face of water. The indefatigueable Stringrham. who tackles and blocks with all be played Friday at Price, when carbon county high, champions of Region Five, and Morgan, title-holders title-holders in the Summit district of Region Two, take the field. The two clubs differ in size and 1 fiiiln Tl m - the zest and power he puts in his t lh ojans of Morgan dynamite laden fists the box! I " ftSLo" 8?erJi ' he ,bulk , ...vcm o a.nu icuuieuiv raster Pres Summer- NEW YORK, Oct. 29 il.n Danno O'Mahpney, Irish heavyweight heavy-weight wrestling champion, suc-cevsefully suc-cevsefully defended his title in Madison Square Garden last night for the second straight time against Ed Don George of Buffalo O'Mahoney, who won the title from George last July in Boston and then beat him again in the same ring in August, threw the challenger after five minutes I eight seconds of grappling. A i body hold turned the trick. The j champion was booed soundly by The first quarterfinal game of I 6,000 fans who were disappointed the 1935 high school season will j at tne quick ending. Morgan, Carbon To Play Friday In Quarterfinal TRACK STARS WANT U. S. IN CHICAGO. Oct. 29 ;.n Six of America's finest track athletes today urged that the United States participate in the 1936 Olympic games at Berlin, Germany. Two of them, Bill Bonthron and Glenn Cunningham, are win ners or the Sullivan award for i outstanding sportsmanship. Both said attempts to boycott the games because of Nazi religious persecution were without foundation. founda-tion. They were joined by Ralph Metcalfe, Met-calfe, Marquette negro sprint champion; Glenn Hardin and Jack Torrance of Louisiana State, and Joe McCluskey, former Fordham . athlete who has won 14 national ! track titles. j Their statements were obtained by the American Olypmic com-! mittee for use in a pamphlet in- j tended to halt the spread of "mis Watchman Gets Big Mule Deer Fork region. The horns on the fat prize are symmetrical and high. It was a I mule deer and a big specimen of the breed. Four fine animals were knocked over in the Manti region by R. A. Hansen,- Leo, Snarr, Frank Mullet and Dresden -Miller. Hansen's, the largest of the group, was an eight-pointer. Wilkin Stars In Victory of Gaels Bill Wilkin, Utah state high information" circulated throughout "7 , One of the finest sets of antlers of the current deer season was brought in by Allen Alleman, Provo Pro-vo njghtwatchman. who brought down a big buck in the Diamond ! obstacle to hurdle Friday in beat REGION THREE Team Standing V Spanish Fork 2 American Fork l Linpoln i Payson 2 Provo 1 Springvilte 1 Pleasant Grove 1 Lehi 0 Last week's results: Payson 12, Pleasant Grove 0. Provo 19, White Pine 6 (non-conference (non-conference ) . Friday's Schedule: Lincoln at Pleasant Grove. Payson at Provo (2:30 "Y" stadium). Lehi at Spanish Fork, American Fork at Springville. L. 0 0 0 2 1 1 3 Tie 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 u Region Three football teams, paced by the brilliant Spanish Fork eleven, go into the downhill stretch of the 1935 schedule this week with four games scheduled and three teams remaining undefeated. unde-feated. S. r. Meets Lehi These three teams are Spanish Foik, favored to win the title, Lincoln, Lin-coln, whose small but scrappy club has made the region sit up and take notice this season, and American Am-erican Fork, which has a tnmrh t bp Pntinlrif . ville high school, is making good as a regular tackle on the mighty St. Mary's gridiron team this year, j In St. Mary's 13 to 0 victory r t- 1 1 t- . !kJC uie university or San Fran- y OOld OllUClieS C1SC Sunday, Wilkin recovered a I fumble that led to the only touch- SPanttsh TrriRi t1 Vi i iuc gdiue. ine uteis also ing out Springville Spanish Fork takes on the tail-end tail-end Lehi club on its home ground and the only question is how many touchdowns the Cardinals will run up on the hapless Pioneers. Pio-neers. Coach Fenton Reeve has a smart, hustling team'in the field this year which may do well in competition for state laurels provided it gets over Lehi and Springville successfully. One of the most attractive games of the season, the clash between Lincoln and American Fork, may be cancelled entirely according to word from Lincoln last night. American Fork was forced to postpone the game because be-cause of a scarlet fever quaran tine and there seems no suitable Bad Bear Bagged Lewis Gets Chance Accused Slayer To Be Arraigned 1 n or rrcr o li lntti'n 1 1 ink. to 1 irvr w ir v ( 1 1 1 v 1 r 1 ltivp . . . 1' . 0 o to"- a tnOUPh rnaph those highly regarded Utah backs hav - has ZL. f umr-some umr-some of the same brand of ounl Sf ?5Sg.d deal of sPe?d and ' ! ucusu hi 11 in ;i rtrpr r roi' rr, i-va V CX I KJIJH is favored. Sports Carnival On At Lake View SEATTLE, Oct. 28 - Youthful Youth-ful Leo Hall, accused slayer of six persons in one of the most sensational sensa-tional crimes in Pacific northwest history, was to be smuggled from an unrevealing hiding place today 1 under heayv guard to face ar raignment in a Port Orchard Wash., courthouse. Whereabouts of the Bremerton "mass murder" suspect was un- a rto , ! Known to any but authorities con- A sports carnival featured by, nected directly with the case Ar, rested on confession of Mrs.- Peggy Peterson Paulos that she accom panied him to the Frank Flieder ' Frank Martz, weU knourn P. A. fan Mr. Martz is a Prince Albert roll-your-own smoker of many years standing. He rolls 2 cigarettes in 12 seconds. Martz gives a lot of credit to P. A. for his speed: 'RolIin' your own is a pleasure with Prince Albert because P. A. rolls so easy. And, to an old roll-your-own smoker like me, the fact that I get around 70 cigarettes out of the big economy tin of P. A. is a mighty important item too." To show you that what Mr. Martz says about Prince Albert is true, we make this money-back offer: r H .! in 11 r Ait. Tf j c j i t :s,L mod. steam heated apt. near Pnnce Albert. Ifyoudon't find them the B. Y. U Call 40tW v 11 ishment he handed to the Wyo ming ball carriers. And Wyoming has its share of fast, hard-hitting backs. The Utah team, led by that spectacular spec-tacular player DelMar Swede Larson, Lar-son, with Kramer, Lunnen, Ievine and others with him in the back-field back-field and such luminaries as Rob- artc U , . . r . , ""bb"". jruusu anu v red wi-i J McKenzie (who has olaved foot bm WreStlln' Sirls tumbling ball for Lo! these many vearsj on 7 P a"d gameS' wiH the line, is capable of p'uUing on a j at 7:30 in the .u...-. it-u.-ic liuil is inriinne: tv,0 ...1 . . . to watch. It'll be a bull game: ! 1 ak" v t sponsored bv tne Ha was removed secretly View M. admission TRUCKS COLLIDE SPANISH FORK Two large trucks crashed 'together on Spanish Span-ish Fork Main street Sunday afternoon. after-noon. The trucks Were badly damaged dam-aged but neither of the drivers was injured according to Marshal Ed. Ciark who investigated. The collision occurred when Gene Har-vel, Har-vel, 15, or American Fork turned round a traffic button and a truck driven by Leo Frandsen of Pleasant Grove going south hit the Harvey truck head-on. The trucks were poshed up on the sidewalk side-walk near the Spanish Fork Coop. Co-op. Both were badly damaged but both drivers escaped injury. too lateIfor CLASSIFICATION - - v rutt luuvr FURNISHED . This Curious World G. L. Smith Heads P. G. Game Group PLEASANT GROVE G. L. Smith was elected president of the Fish and Game association of Pleasant Grove at a recent meeting. meet-ing. Irving Johnson was chosen IOr VICe DresiClRnt: frnn Io j home on the night of the massacre j secretary-treasurer; board of di rectors, Charles Harper, Duanne Carlson, Sydney Cullimore, Clifford Clif-ford Tomlinson. Ike Hayes, president presi-dent of the association for the past ten years was made an honorary hon-orary member. Mr. Hayes recently moved to Provo. r vyivrw 11118 IS a c a .... . bear story, but the head and pelt ! field 8 of a 375 pound brown animal be- ' ing prepared as souvenirs by H. S 1 Armstrong and Melvin Snow of i Spanish Fork are available to ! prove it. j Snow shot the bear in Mill I Creek Sunday morning when it chased Armstrong as they were carrying a slain buck deer down a path . In the same region Guilford and Barney Newitt had a similai experience two years ago when a 350 pound brown bear chased Barney after his last shot had failed to take effect and Guilford came to his assistance and killed the enraged animal. 4 - f ! r HELD OVER! Thru WEDNESDAY By All Means SEE This Finest of All Crawford Pictures ! alternate date on which to plav it- American Fork has played only Pleasant Grove thus far but has looked good in outside competition. competi-tion. Yet the Cavemen may ruh up against stiff competition at Springville, as the Red Devils are fast, versatile and have a dangerous danger-ous offensive once it gets clicking Provo plays its final leaguo game of the season Friday, meet ing Payson at the "Y" stadium and the big, green-shirted Bulldog team gets the nod over the Stan Wilson aggregation. The Simmons-Young outfit clicked last Friday in drubbing White Pine at Ely, Nevada, 19 to 6 and is capable cap-able of putting on a deal of steam The power attack of the Provoans is functioning clean and hard this season and a trio of hard-hitting backs Peterson, Allen and Marshall-are difficult to stop. The Lions put over a clear-cut two touchdown touch-down victory over Pleasant Grove last week and lost to Springville only by two unconverted extra points ana are also capable of a good brand of football. Lincoln hopes to keep its unblemished un-blemished record clean by winning over Pleasant Grove on the home ground of the Vikings and all appearances point toward a win for the Tigers of Coach Don Dixon. The Vikings of Eleroy West have beaten Lehi this season, sea-son, however, and Teld American Pork to a narrow victory. With the game in their own back van! they are apt to give the fast Lincoln Lin-coln crew some anxious moments. If American Fork and, Lincoln win Friday and American Fork tips Lehi in the final game, there will be an acute problem to settle to find out the champion. The title this year is to be decided by the loss column, not by the percentage, so there is a "possibility "possi-bility of a triple tie among Spanish Span-ish Fork, American Fork and Lincoln. Some of the opposing teams may iron out this little problem with no more trouble by bowling over the leaders. V from ' M. I A. and a small, the Kitsap county jail Saturday fee will be charged. i nierht. night William Ferguson finest, tastiest roll-your-own cigarettes you ever smoked, return the tin with the rest of the tobacco in it. and we will re fund full purchase price, plus postage. P.A.'s a wonderful pipe smoke too. (Signed) R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Winston-Salem, North Carolina. C 1M6. R. J. BarBoMa Tab. Co. NngeAlqeut THE EASY -TO -ROLL JOY SMOKE North. o31 WILL furnish cans and can your I ueer tor nail. Mrs. G. T. Harrison. Har-rison. PI. View. o30 FOR SALE SUSCELLANEOUS CHOICE tulip bulbs. Mixed, Dar-wins, Dar-wins, nice, large Kaiser Crown. $2 per hundred. Thomas W Allen, 816 W. 3 S&uth. nl5 i DOORS, leather davenette water tank. Phone 954M. and o29 Keys Made - Gun Repairing Does Your Gun Conform to the New Federal Law' SEE US OSCAR CARLSON Sporting Goods Co. 11i- T WTlk'Il' 1r1 -www 112 NO. UNIV. AVE. nPHONE 82 FOR THE. v A ENTIRE. . . arc. - y ; per. 1 't-'-' A I SlNGt AS OFTEN IN GATTMS AS AT Markets At A Glance 1,4 j S a . A4 on ! By UNITED PRESS j Stocks irregularly higher j late rally led by steel shares. . Bonds irregular and quiet. Curb stocks irregularly higher. ! Call money renewals V4 of 1 per j cent. j foreign exchaneg: dollar easy. I urams: wneat . to 1 3-8 higher; I corn ana rj'e irregular; oats i higher. vx , ivii in in. Rubber 10 to 11 points lower. SUE FOR TAXES Suit for recovery of $25.94 in alleged delinquent sales taxes and penalties was filed Tuesday by the State Tax commission against Blaine Flanders of Santaquin. THE WORD "TRANSPIRE." OOBS MOT ACnJALlY MEAJU "TO HAPPEA? BUT UNION PACIFIC STAGES Orem Station-Phone 310W Buses Everywhere! Frequent, schedules, air cushion seats, tropic air heaters; courteous drivers. Dally service over the short cut to Phoenix and points south. Full particulars call UNION BUS DEPOT JESS SCO VILLE, Agent V;". 4 n -iMi j uvel ! J -! : - - im Hurry! Last Times today . y- MIH - m i -Tomorrow and Thursday- - ADDED J-BETTY J-BETTY BOOP Cartoon . . - Coming THURS. . . . The First Stage Show of the New Season! ONE , DAY Only John' Henry Lewis, below, Arizona Ari-zona Negro, finally gets a chance at the light-heavyweight , crown of Bob OUn. )ibove, when the two meet in St. Louis. Oct. 31 Ml r' ' r r h iff y XftlCE YOU l&3&! Also Feature, Cartoon & New? Shows Continuous from 2 p. m Mats. 25c - Eves. 35c - Kids 10c Notice to All Witches, Spooks and Goblins . . be in attendance attend-ance Thursday Nite at 11 :45 at the Paramount ! Bring Every Member of Your Clan ! Celebrate Hallowe'en Make It the One Big Nite of the Year! Special Screen & Stage Show Also Hats, Horns and Noise Makers! nun .i i;rl 5 Mazo de la Roche's with Kay Johnson, lah Hunler, C. Aubrey Smilh, Nigel Bruce, David Manners, Peggy Wood, Jessie Ralph, Molly Lamoni THURSDAY Only! On the Stage WALT SHRUM and His Nationally Known Radio Artists COLORADO HIIjL BILLIES 4:00-9:00 with "JALNA" Also Appearing With the Crest GALA HALLOWEEN MIDNIGHT FROLIC! THURSDAY, U p. m. FUN FOR ALL On the Screen "THE CASE OF THE CURIOUS BRIDE" Starts SATURDAY PAUL MUNI in "DR. SOCRATES" f) 193J Y NKA SERVICE. INC. (041 |