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Show PAGE EIGHT PROVO (UTAH) EVENING- HERALD, FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 1936 SECTION TWO Leven "Y" Faculty Will Play For Title Leading Clubs Tied; To Decide First Half Championship Next Thursday 4 4 2 1 L. Pet. o i.ooo 0 1.000 2 3 3 4 .500 .250 .250 .000 COMMERCIAL LEAGUE Team Standing W. Levens Y Faculty Van's Shoe Provo Cleaning: Steel Plant 1 Utah Power 0 Thursday' Reult Y Faculty 45. ProvN Cleaning 42. Leven's 47, Stet-1 Plant 33. Van's Shoe 40. Utah Power 21. Next Thursday's Schedule 6:30 p. m. Y Faculty vs. Levens. 7:30 p. m. Van's Shoe vs. Steel Plant. 8:30 p. m. Provo Cleaning vs. Utah Powei. ter the game was a rout, with the ' Powermen being held to a single ! point, while Van's scored 15. i The scores: LEVENS G. J. Eastmond, f 9 T. Easrmonc. 1 2 j Miller, c 4 ! Nelson, g 1 I Van Wagenen, g 0 ; Evans, f 2 : M. Olsen. f t I Decker, g 3 Versatility In Person By Everett Thorpe T. F. P. 2 0 18 0 4 2 10 0 2 0 0 0 0 4 113 2 0 6 Totals 22 12 3 47 The Y Faculty basketeers and Leven's will battle for the first half championship of t-i.e Provo Commercial league in the Third ward gymnasium next Thursday at 6:30. Both teams came out of the fourth round of play Thursday night still unscathed. The Faculty Fac-ulty team downed the Provo Cleaning club 45 to 12 in a hotly contested game that went into an extra period and Leven's defeated defeat-ed Steel Plant 47 to 33. Van's Shoe moved into third place by whipping Utah Power 40 to 21. Leven' nearly doubled the Steel Plant team in the first half, building build-ing up a 22-12 advantage, with Jack Eastmonc hitting the hoop consistently. The second half was played on practically even terms. Westover and Oakley led the Steel Plant scoring. The Y faculty was forced to stage a last-half spurt to down the Provo Cleaning team, which waa ahead 21 to 19 at intermission time. G. Madsen paced the Cleaners in the first half and the score was knotted 41-41 at the end of the regular time. In the second half every ma.n on the Faculty team entered the scoring to put the team ahead. Met Wilson and Ott Romney topped top-ped the point making. Hammond lead the Van's Shoe team to its victory ,,ver the Utah Power club, which has yet to win a game. In the final quar- Westover, f. Oakley, f. . Hoover, c. . Wing, g. . . Kimbzer, g. Merrill, f Wilkins, g . Totals STEEL PLANT G. 4 4 1 1 2 3 1 T. F. P. 0 0 8 0 0 4 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 8 2 2 5 6 2 .16 1 33 Y FACULTY G. T. F. P. Romney, f 5 Swenson, f 1 Hart, c 3 E. Kimball, g 2 M. Wilson, g 4 Dixon, f 3 G. Kimball, g 0 4 1 1 2 2 1 1 1 11 1 3 1 o i 6 Totals 18 12 PROVO CLEANING G. T. Smith, f 1 Dallin, f 1 j Madsen, c 6 Parry, g 6 , C. Olsen, g 3 (Bigler, g 2 2 10 1 7 1 1 9 45 F. P. 0 0 2 0 2 2 14 0 12 1 7 1 5 Totals 19 9 4 42 VAN'S SHOE OLDEST OF THE FAMED XONNEY BROTHERS OTTS COACHING CAREER HAS BEEN ONB OF COLOR AND SUCCESS-FRSTAT SUCCESS-FRSTAT EAST HGH SCHOOL WHERE MIS TEAMS WON CHAMPIONSHIPS IN ALL SPORTS-LATER AT MONTANA HE PERFECTED THE GOWEN BOBCATS WHO WOfi 3 CONSECUTIVE CON. CHAMPIONSHIPS. AT PRESENT HIS BIG 'Y' TEAMS ARE BRINGING NOME THEIR SHARE OF CONFERENCE TR0PHYS Men love, f j Hammond, f. j Van Wagenen, c. ! Hanson, g. 'Johnson, f. : Martin, f. Totals 17 1 G. T. F. P. .4 0 0 8 .7 3 2 16 .0100 .1113 .2 8 3 7 10 0 2 2 0 0 4 .17 13 6 40 We Compliment UTAH COlNTY and PROVO CITY On the Progressive Attitude TOWARD NEW INDUSTRY! M. H. GRAHAM PRINTING CO. Commercial and Society Printing 30 South First West - Phone 285 BRIGHAM YOUNG .Jfyr J W V$ i university m i m Mis ABILITY AS A H t? tJJTfgs5 WRITER-DRAMATIST l n 171 AND SPEAKER HAS. I l CSST BROUGHT HIM I SMI 1 NATIONAL RENOWN yZr iffll i f?: . ' rt Courtesy Deseret News. UTAH POWER G. T. F. P. Alder, f 0 2 1 1 Vachei. f 1 0 0 2 Alger, c .1 2 1 3 Wilson, g 2 2 2 6 Olsen. g 2 4 3 7 Hawkins. 1 1 0 0 2 Boyd, c 0 0 0 0 Totals 7 10 7 21 THREE HOLDOUTS ON N. Y. TEAMS NEW YORK. Jan. 31 (U.R) Greater New York's three major league ball clubs each had a holdout hold-out case on its T.ands today. The holdouts are: Yankees.: Outfield Ben Chapman. Chap-man. Giants: Pitcher Clydcll Castle-man. Castle-man. Brooklyn: Pitcher Van Mungo. Chapman is the latest to join the holdout group. From his home at Birmingham, Ala., Chapman revealed he had sent his contract I back to the Yanks because his $12,000 salary of last year had been cut. The temperamental outfielder out-fielder suggested that the Yanks trade or release him unless they wanted to pay his price, which he revealed as $14,000. Mungo wants a salary of 15.-000 15.-000 and Castleman's successful showing in his first year up has I given him the notion that he I shotrid be given a steep boost. Frank Frisch, Hank Greenberg To Get Awards Frankie Approaching 18th Year in National League; Pilots Cards. n Sale! eneral Electric Radio EXTRAORDINARY TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE Hundreds of These Radios Arc Now In Homes of Utah County Since Their Introduction Into this Territroy 1 H Li f i'M - - k MODEL fl-65 $67.50 Trade-in Allowance SI7..50 MODKL A-H.- American Standard Broadcasts a n d Short-Wave Police Calls. fi All Metal TuIh's MODEL A-75 $104.5.0 Trade-In Allowance S30.C0 mi : ; p NEW 1936 METAL TUBE RADIOS Long and Short Wave Beautiful Cabinets MODEL A-75 S Reception Bands American and For-sign For-sign Broadcasts 7 All Metal Tubes. Latest Engineering Design PHONE 209 NOW! MODEL A-53 $35.50 Trade -In Allowance S 10.00 T!!!!llllIlIlIiilljUIUt MODEL. A-63 American Standard Broadcasts Broad-casts Foreign Shortwave Short-wave 6 All Metal Tube. MODEL A-53 American Standard Broad-oasts Broad-oasts and Short-Wavo 5 All Metal Tubes. MODEL A-63 $49.50 Trade-In Allowance $15.00 If You Haven't An Old Radio to Turn In We Will Give You Your Choice G-E FOOD MIXER Buffet TOASTER SET T f - I O 1 CS f COFFEE MAKER EIJ3CTRIC CLOCK V clllICS lO 1 SEE THESE IN OUR WINDOWS! FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION- -NO OBLIGATION 90 WEST CENTER PHONE 209 NEW YORK. Jan. 30 r.H Baseball heroes change with the ' season and stars of yesteryear are i quickly forgotten.v but Frankie Fiisch continues to carve out for himself an everlasting place among the immortals of the game. Frisch, approaching his 18th campaign in the national league, will received his third great tribute trib-ute Sunday when he is awarded a plaque from the Baseball Writer's Writ-er's Association of America, New York chapter, for his long and meritorious service to baseball. He was named the most valuable player in the National League in 1931 and managed the world's champion St. Louis Cardinals in 1934. No other individual ever has possessed those three honors. A player who in his boyhood worshipped Frisch from afar will received the other award of the baseball scribes. He is Hank Greenberg, Detroit Tigers' first baseman, who will be presented the "player of the year" plaque. Both honors will be conferred at the Baseball Writers' annual dinner. din-ner. Frisch and Greenberg are natives na-tives of New York, born and bred here. Through 17 stormy years Frisch has been one of the most aggressive aggres-sive players in the game. He is one of McGraw's last links with baseball. He was discovered, tutored tut-ored and developed by McGraw. For eight years he starred for the giants and then, in the colossal blunder of his career, McGraw traded him to the Cardinals for Rogers Hornsby in December 1926. That mistake eventually caused McGraw to step down as leader of the Giants. Frisch's departure robbed the Giants of much of their fiery tactics and color. But he carried his courageous leadership leader-ship with him to St. Louis and the rough and ready play of the Cardinals under Frisch won for them the nickname, "Thev Gas House Gang." JOCKEY SUSPENDED MIAMI, Fla., Jan. 31 (U.E) "Sonny" Workman, ace horse racing jockey, today was under a seven-day suspension on a claim of foul. It was the first disqualification disqualifi-cation of the 1936 racing season at Hialeah park. Grizzly bears are susceptible to attacks of snow blindness. j. England makes use of about 140,000,000 stamps every week. tl AISf.llTII TO BE HONORED t MILWAUKEE, Wis. Plans of basketball coaches of the United States to pay substantial honor to Dr. James A. Naismith, originator origin-ator of their sport, have taken definite form with the designation designa-tion by the National Association of Basketball Coaches committee in charge of Feb. 7-15 as National Naismith week. G. Ott Romney, head of the Brigham Young university department depart-ment of physical education, is director dir-ector of the move in this region and has .appointed several key men to aid him. Every university, college and high school in the country will be asked to set aside one game during that week as the "Naismith "Nai-smith game," and to donate one cent from each paid admission to the fund. It is the plan of the coaches to defray the expenses of Dr. and Mrs. Naismith to the 1936 Olympic Ol-ympic games in Berlin and, if the drive is a complete success to found an annuity in their behalf. Dr. Naismith, 73 years of age, will soon retire as a 'professor" of physical education at Kansas university. uni-versity. He originated basketball at the Springfield (Mass.) Y. M. C. A. college In 1891, and is an ardent follower of the sport which this year is included in the Olympic Ol-ympic program. PIRATES BUY SHULTE PITTSBURGH, Jan. 31 CP The Pittsburgh Pirates announced today the purchase or Fred Shulte, Washington Senator outfielder, for an unrevealed amount of money. The Cuban barrel palm develops a barrel-like proturbe ranee midway mid-way up the trunk. Provo and Utah County Are To Be Congratulated OM SECURING THE BIG STEAM POWER PLANT IT MEANS NEW INDUSTRY, NEW PROSPERITY AND NEW HAPPINESS HAPPI-NESS FOR OUR PEOPLE. LET US FORGET SELF IN OUR DESIRE TO WORK FOR THE BEST INTERESTS OF PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, STATE AND NATION. 2 2 IN OUR JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE NOW ffiosxfl ffIP (3 AIT Values to $25 r Hart SUITS Schaffner and Marx and' OVERCOATS n n can .c CRESLEY, VARSITY TOWN AND UNDER GHAD V SALE FLORSIIEin SHOES Most Styles $7.5 Some Styles $8.65 SALE LEATHER COATS 25 Leather Coats Taken From Our Higher Price Ranges to Close Out at $6.95 SALE SHIRTS Grayco and Wilson Bros., About 4 Dozen left in this lot at $.35 3 For $3.75 AT SALE FREEMAN SHOES Winter Weight Oxfords $3.85 $4.05 SALE WOOL SPORT COATS Values to $6.50 for $&45 SALE Hanes Heavy Weight WINTER UNDERWEAR Final Close Out Per Garment 95c TUT TCP TrTrr TCP 9 li 11 li 11 V H-3 11 |