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Show PAGE SEVAN i-L. PRCFVO (UTAH) EVENING HERALD,, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1935 RM.GHFootball Slate - Topped By Ute-Buffalo Game; 'Y' at Gunnison University of Utah Redskins Meet Powerful Colorado University Outfit; Cougars Leave For Mountaineer Game Topped by the game between University of Utah and Colorado; , University at Salt Lake City Sat-J "iirday, the Rocky Mountain con- xerence root ban teams wm ue tjusy in a series of promising con-Jtests con-Jtests this week. V, The Ougars of Brigham Young i 3eft Thursday night by train for Junnison, Colorado, to combat the j ilunt&ineers of Western State on the Colorado team's field, which fs situated in air even more rare 'than the atmosphere at Provo. JLdiie Coach John H. Smith is in charge' of the team until Head Coach Ott Romney joins the squad JPriday.: " There were 28 members on the traveling squad which meets a Western State team definitely bet ter than it has been for years i Other conference games: i "" Wyoming U vs. Utah Aggits atj .Xogan. The Aggies are favored ; to take the measure of the punchers, punch-ers, despite the loss of Tate War- dell. Spearheaded by Kent Ryan, j the Aggie attack wil lbe tough for .the Cowboys to slop. Colorado College vs. Colorado f Jdines at Golden. The Tigers look j iike cinch winners although the .Miners will be sparked by the fact that, it is homecoming day. University of Hawaii vs. Denver University of Denver. A tossup, the Rainbows have won the past j two years but it is cold in Denver j and that might hamper the tricky j team' from Honolulu. , j Greeley State vs. Northeastern j Oklahoma Teachers. j Montana State vs. University of Idaho Southern branch at Poca- , tello. University of Utah's eleven , seem good enougn to stop the brilliant Colorado U. team, which is paced by a host of fast and j tricky backfield performers, in- ' eluding Lam, Wagner, Staab and' others. But the Utes haw a nifty offense of their own and a line than can open holes. It should be one of the standout games of the season. Coach Romney will probably start the same lineup against the Mountaineers as took the field last Saturday at Provo against Utah, with Pehrson slated to do the kick-off kick-off work. That will put Soffe and Crane, ends; Gillespie and Lloyd guards; Waldo and Asay, tackles; Blackham, center; Lyons, quarterback; quarter-back; Warner and McBeth, halfbacks, half-backs, and Stringham, fullback. Lyons has been indisposed part of the week but is apparently fit again. Jack Woodward, passing specialist, will likely see a lot of duty in the Western State game at quarterback and left halfback. He is considered a semi-regular. Billiard Tourney In Second Round CHICAGO, Nov. 8 clIl The world's three cushion billiard tournament entered the second round today with two Chicagoans meeting in the first match. Jay Bozeman, Vallejo, Cal., last night defeated Tiff Denton, Kansas Kan-sas City, 50 to 35, in 44 innings. In the other match last night Willie Heppe, New York, won from Arthur Thurnblad, Chicago 50 to 41 in 44 innings. Welker Cochran, San Francisco beat Otto Reiselt, Philadelphia 50 to 42 in 49 innings and Augie Kieckhefer, Chicago, defeated Allen Al-len Hall, St. Louis, 50 to 47 in 59 innings earner on the day. .:' " ' :: t t , PI IfJ ' tows i- 4.f Y w4 innMiiMiwifthiiii.MwMiMii rr r i n i m r" - fi .. IBiuillilog Basket Prospects Bright ( Nine Squadmen Rtiirit To Scrap For Places On PrdVo High Hoop Team; Peterson, Daniels, Colton, Hoover Back a -4.$ S5- Nc. this wasn't an acrobatic tumbling act; it was a mighty serious and thrilling moment in the 9-0 victory of University of San Francisco over Loyola of Los Angeles. The man horizontal in the air is Bacciarim. U. S. P. halfback, as he spoiled a pass intended for Labozetti, Loyola quarterback, shown just missing the bail. At the loft s Gerardin. U. S. P. quarterback. Al Singer Drops Dunbar With Right WHITE PLAINS, N. Y.. Nov. 8 ii'.I! Al Singer, former light-1 weight champion, won the third , straight fignt last night in his latest comeback campaign at ! County Center. Singer stopped Al Dunbar of New York in the first "round. After Aft-er twice dropping his opponent for the count of nine, Al landed a ' stiff right which ended the sched-' uld 10-rounder, two minutes and ten seconds after it started. YOUNG HITLER DECLARES WAR i, 1 " ; i f m'lntii fiiniilii if- fn nnjif' TmI I ''"''l'hj'Jll'J- mgmg.MmumumMVX J t"""f M I : v H i 1 k Kentucr.'! 'y.Qfpi f St't1 i " If"' n - 1 'iPfr.-A'.rii.''':i.r' ' HKIQfl (German Wrestler Regards McCann as "Cream Puff" Grappler. Armistice Day Monday means peace to most people . but to Ycung Hitler, German welterweight welter-weight wrestler it is a day of war. Hitler will clash with Earl Wildcat Wild-cat McCann, sturdy little wrestler who is one of the best in the business, busi-ness, in a finish match at Park Ro-She. "Whoever heard of McCann? He's just a cream puff like the rest of the wrestlers here." That's how Hitler catalogued the Wildcat Friday. Calling McCann a "cream puff" is practically the twelve story limit in understatement. understate-ment. If there was ever a tough, powerful and clever wrestler in Utah county, with legs like rubber und a cast iron constitution, McCann Mc-Cann is that man. But Hitler holds him in high disdain. dis-dain. "I want action," he howled, wrestlers and hope McCann gives me any action. What is the matter with Henry Jones? The fans around here should know by now that he is afraid of me! "I have been having a lot of fun with the so-called Utah wrestlers and hope McCann give me some kind of a match. They don't make 'em too tough for the Germans and I'll prove that if McCann is tough then I'll get just a little tougher!" With those kind thoughts off his mini. Hitler strode away with that rolling gait which indicated X'- f. J Krtif PlltQ he was not unfamiliar with scis- A wl!)lcu IT mo sors and leg splits. It will be McCann's first appearance ap-pearance of the season and many wrestling conscious fans are pleased. pleas-ed. McCann put on some of the best bouts ever at Ro-She. An eight round boxing match designed to lead up to a middle- weight championship contest is ! booked between Arcade Pierce, j Springville, andRed Briggs. The j winner will meet Truman Harvey I for the middleweight title. Floyd j Hansen, Salt Lake City, meets I Dan Mathews, Seattle, in a one I hour wrestling match and three j four round boxing bouts are book-i book-i ed. Tate Wardell Out Amiens to Honor Ruskin x AMIENS i ;.i: a movement has been started here to honor John Ruskin, English art critic, who is greatly aamrreo. and respected because of his remarkable LOGAN A twisted knee will keep Captain Clayton "Tate" Wardell out of the Utah Aggie lineup for the remainder of the season, it was reported Thursday. Wardell injured knee on the road to practice field. For the remaining games, including the test with Wyoming University Saturday, the game with Brig-ham Brig-ham Young on November 16 at Loean and with University of Utah at Salt Lake City, Novem- ber 28, Floyd Rasmussen will be I the Farmer leader. Rasmussen is quarterback. With nine men returning from the eleven man championship squad ot 1934-35, Coaches Glenn Simmons Sim-mons and Ike Young look forward for-ward to exceptional prospects for a title contending basketball team at the Provo high school this season. Ashton Fielding, center, and Captain Paul Thompson, guard, both regulars, were lost try way of graduation, and a host of last year setni-regular reserves, speedy youngsters from last year's sophomore sopho-more squad and miscellaneous new material are on hand to scrap for the two places and if possible to squeeze some of the returning regulars reg-ulars out of a position. ' Returning squadmen 4 are Reed Colton, Mont Hoover, Willis Daniels Dan-iels and Dave Fielding, forwards; Glen Allen and Jack Jensen, centers, cen-ters, and Vernon Peterson, La-Nell La-Nell Hayward and Paul Larson, guards. Colton, Hoover, Daniels and Peterson can be considered as regulars, inasmuch as they interchanged in-terchanged during the season on the first five. Allen, too, played on the first lineup a number of times and Jensen and Hayward got in several of the games. The 1935 BullGoga can be classified classi-fied as a team with plenty of speed, cleverness and a world of shooting ability. Reserve strength should be unquestionably the best in the Alpine division. Petersen was last season the best scorer in the divisiin. Developing De-veloping a good running mate to him from Hayward, Larson and possibly Jensen and other new men should not be difficult. Colton, Hoover and Daniels all demonstrated demon-strated ability to spare on the forward line last year, although they slumped near the close of the season. Likely all three will see a lot of service. Allen looks like a good bet at center. He is tall, has jumping abil ity, is a sharpshooter and an excellent ex-cellent passer. Jensen is likewise I an able center. ! From the sophomore squad of ! last year, Rulon Johnson and Henry Hen-ry Bourne, quards; Merlin Slack, j and Don Breinholt, forwards, and i Madsen center, are good prospects, i Johnson will be remembered as a j long shot artist who defied guard- : Boyle, wiio comes Trom Delta as one of the foremost sprinters in the state; Boyd McAffee and Frank Sutherland is another speedster speed-ster who performs 'well on the cinder cin-der track. Chief among the sophomores, who come with fine reputations, are Arnold Braham and Bob Johnson John-son of Farrer high, and Carter and Gordon Mitchell, Dixon high. Graham was a scoring genius at Farrer. Mercer, Farley and Jenkins Jen-kins of Farrer, and Owen Dixon, Hundley and Bill Snow are other good looking first year men. Provo will opei. its pre-season schedule at home against Stan Wilson's Payson high team on December 4. Other pre-season games, tentative as yet, are: December Dec-ember 6 Granite at Provo; December Dec-ember 11 Spanish Fork at Provo; December 13 Jordan at Provo; December 18 Nephi at Provo; December 20 Provo at Payson; December 31 Provo at Spanish Fork (preliminary to B. Y. U.Fresno U.-Fresno State) January 1 Provo at Nephi. The first league game finds ALL-AMERICA IDE A SCORNED NEW HAVEN. Conn., Nov. 8 (lp A demand to halt the practice prac-tice of picking ail-American foot-hpll foot-hpll teauv was made today in an editorial in the Yale News, undergraduate under-graduate daily. The annual all-star teams, inaugurated in-augurated by the later Walter Camp, himseif a Yale coach in 1879 and 1880, must be abolished, the publication said. The news, representing a school which has placed 66 players more than any other college in the country on past all-America elevens, elev-ens, asked that university athletic officials everywhere unite in a concerted effort to end the "deplorable "de-plorable practice." "We have never been of the opinion that the oft-attacked overemphasis over-emphasis of football has had any appreciable effect on the players." the editorial said. "The vast majority ma-jority f them are untouched by the adulation they receive; their usual reaction lo newspaper reports re-ports is one of amusement at the ignorance revealed; their unconsciousness uncon-sciousness of adoring thousand in the stands is proverbial. "Yet when a man lealiaes that he may win a National Honor if he can sufficiently impress sports writers, this health attitude of scorn tends to disappear. "When Ali-Aintr:cans were tirst chosen, football teams of the high est calibre were lew and it was B.' Y. high playing Provo in. theJ possible for one man to have per tsuiidog gym. Last year Provo won second in the Alpine division but lost to Payson in the playoff game to decide the third tournament team from the Alpine-Nebo districts. In making a herring: into a kipper, kip-per, the fish is split open, salted, and then placed in a smoking kiln over smoldering sawdust, wood, or chips, until considered done. sonal knowledge of 11 men who stood out sufficiently from the rest to justify their selection. But during the last years of Walter Camp's life, the number of good teams had so increased that it was an enormous strain for him to see all of them in action. Indeed In-deed it is known among Camp's friends thai oeiore his death he more than once expressed his opnion as to the inapplicability of the scheme." hen volume, "The Bible of Amiens." which refers to the famous cathedral, ca-thedral, the largest in France as regards the area U covers. Six Years to Paint Bridge SYDNKV, N.W.S.W. l'.Ri The famous $50,000,000 bridge which ! ing in 1934 by dropping in baskets spans Sydney harbor is having its : f yom any angie. annual painting. Forty painters have begun on their huge task. : Matenal- and they do not expect to finish New men who cannot be couni- for six years. ed out of the picture are Clyde pre-A RM I ST ICE DAY SATURDAY NIGHT DANCE! IP AIRES na - SEIE Sponsored by AMERICAN LEGION PROVO POST NO. HOWARD KEARN'S BAND Biggest Dance in Utah County ! mm trfffqs lower Prices f IT'S riper, amazingly smoother! Yet Bottoms Up's amazing popularity now makes possible new low prices! Made the genuine, costly sour -mash way, in a famous family-owned Ken-tucky Ken-tucky distillery, from a 65-year-old formula rich in flavorful small grains. 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