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Show . - . . -- ' . - "- . . PROVO (UT A H) -EVE NfNG .HER A L D, T HUES D A Y, MAY - 2 8, 1 9 3 6 PAGE FOUR E AD LEA CUE 7 in rM ji niviijrs wjniiiir iwiifikirc V- 3 flaZy n Twelfth Breaks Slab Duel Sam Christensen Bests Shepherd in Pitching Pitch-ing Duel When Timps Get Five Safeties Safe-ties in Twelfth Frame UTAH INDUSTRIAL. LEAGUE Team Standing i W. I Pot. ! Provo limps 4 ' .7 1 17. S. Mint's 3 X .500 ! Magna-Garf ield 'I 2 .500 j Gemmell Club 2 .50O Finney Beverage .... 2 4 .333 : Wednesday's result: I Provo i V. S. Mines 3. j Saturday's schedule: j Magna at Prow. Gemmell at Pinney. Sunday's schedule: Pinney at Provo. Gemmell At Magna. BY J. R. PU LSON On top of the Utah Industrial baseball league ;us the result of a 7 to 3 victory.-t.rver U. S. Mines, the Provo Timps Thursday wejse waiting the invasion of the two best fielding clubs in the league Saturday and Sunday. The league lending Timps play Magna-Garfield in the Provo park on Memorial Day at 2:30. and engage Pmney Beverage of Salt Lake City Sunday at 2:30 in 'the local 1 ' Tied at the top of. the league, the Timps and Miners Wednes- j day 'stage a thrililng 12-inning one to . . . LEVEN'S Can Cu'oio ! forget fill? No. no he lias just re-memben-d another steejxir at L( oifs Smart Spring Polo Shirts at SSe and l,)8c. It " s the kind of value you dream about ! .3l SS9 0 (ffi&BlWB ' PRICED P 16 MONTHS OLD 100 PROOF WHISKEY mmmm E-fi tm" KENTUCKY Straight Whiskey .PINTS Code No. 55 FIFTHS Code No. 54 a FOR BIG MONEY SAVING Change to Glenmore's MINT SPRINGS Kentucky Straight Whiskey and Keep the Change! Vt PINTS Code No. lOO PINTS Cod No. 99 FIFTHS Codo No. S GLEN-MORE DISTILLERIES CO., Inc. "Owensboro Kentucky Largest Distillery in Kentucky encounter to gain the advantage. It was the Timps' five-hit spree in the twelfth that finally turned the tide and gave the Provoans a win. Sam Christensen. sturdy Timp right-hander, thereby got the better bet-ter of Frank Shepherd, Mines upnotch hurler. Both went the full route. Woodbury, fast-improving Timp secend sacker, opened the twelfth inning with a single over second base, followed by Treseder's single to left. Lob Collins came to bat and smacked out a double that sent both men home. After Fran Dudley whiffed, Buke Robi-son Robi-son leaned on the wood for another an-other two-bagger that brought Collins around. Lou Tezak socked a one-base hit to center to score Robison. With the score 2 to 1 against them, the Timps braced in the eighth ining to score two mns and tie the score at threee-ali. From the eighth until the twelfth the defense of the two clubs functioned func-tioned on eVen terms with Christensen Chris-tensen and Shepherd pitchiitg on even terms. The Provoaxis hit 15 times as compared with 11 for the Miners. One of those 11 hits was a homer off the t of Zaccaria. The score: PROVO B H O 6 4 4 A 5 0 1 0 0 0 4 1 4 Woodbury, 2 b .... Treseder, If Collins, 3b F. Dudley, cf ... Robison. if I 3 0 2 4 'i 1 Ingersoll. lb (i Tezak. ss 6 LaComb. c 1 Christensen. p 2 16 1 1 1 1 1 2 Totals 4 9 1 i 3ti If) r. s minks B H O Krim.-m ss 6 Adams. 3b . . . f Zaccaria, If ti Vecchio, cf 6 Fonty, if 5 Walbeck. 2b 4 Reed, lb 4 Butler, c 5 Shepherd, p. 5 3 0 3 2 0 1 1 1 4 3 1 4 1 13 0 9 1 0 Totals -'core by innings: 46 11 36 14 Provo OOl OOO 020 004 7 , lT S Minos 110 010 OOO 000 3 ' Summary: Errors-- Collins 2. Tezak. Adams 2. Stolen bases F. Dudley. Zaccaria. Sacrifice hits Christensen, Adams, Reed, j Home i nn Zaccaria. Three-base hit - Vecchio. Two-base hits Woodbury. Robison. Collins.! D uble plays Christensen to In- I per soU. Christensen ' to Tezak to Ingersoll. Butler to Reed, Kris- : man to Walbeck to Reed. Struck j out By Christensen 2, Shepherd j oases on Da us Ull ennsten-sen ennsten-sen 1. Shepherd 1. Hit with pitched pitch-ed ball La Comb by Shepherd. Wild pitch - Christensen Umpires Spry and Beaumont. Scorer S. Smith. COAQJ timini- s m Eliminated 1 1 mm:J .: v.va:-v.v.v 3 Russell Snowberger, Detroit, shown above, will be unable to compete in the Memorial Day speedway race at Indianapolis. The veteran's six cylinder car crashed into the southwest wall during a test run Wednesday. He escaped without injury but the machine was badly damaged. ! THREE QUALIFY FOR SPEEDVAY; i LACK ONLY ONE INDIANAPOLIS, May 28 (l!.R) All but one of the 33 places in the starting line for the Memorial day speedway race were filled as the last seven prospective entries awaited final trial testa today. Louis Meyer, Huntington Park. Cal., broke a two-weeks' jinx and qualified with an average of 114.171 miles perhour for the 25-mile 25-mile test run. Cylinder blocks broke in his machine on two previous prev-ious attempts. Lou Moore, Los Angeles, who has placed third in the speedway classic twice and was runner-up once, qualified Wednesday with an average speed of 113.996 miles per hour. Mauri Rose, Columbus, O., qualified with 113.890. Russell Snowberger. Detroit, was eliminated when he crashed into the southwest wal lduring a test run. He escaped without injury in-jury but his machine was too badly bad-ly damaged to be repaired in time for another attempt. Fred Frame, Los Angeles, who won the race in 1932, abandoned his trial run after negotiating three laps at 109 miles per hour. Although the minimum qualifying speed is 100 miles per hour, using not mere than two and a half gallons gal-lons of fuel for the 25 miles, it is expected that at least 110 miles an hour will be necessary for a place in final listings. CAMERA QUITS WHEN LEFT LEG IS PARALYZED NEW YORK. May 28 r.l!-Leroy r.l!-Leroy Haynes. "Brown Howitzer" from Philadelphia blasted Primo Camera into pugilistic oblivion last night but the achievement caused only mild tremors in the heavyweight division. In scoring a technical knockout over Carnera in the ninth round of a scheduled 10-round bout at Ebbets field Haynes added no prestige to his campaign to menace men-ace Joe Louis. It took him three times as long to triumph over the Giant Italian as he took last March in Philadelphia. Again Carnera quit under fire. His face distorted in pain, one of his massive legs paralyzed and his giant body swaying as he groped for support, Carnera stumbled acioss the ring 40 second sec-ond after the start of the ninth round and mumbled surrender to Referee Arite Donovan. Carnera abandoned the battle, he said, because his left leg went dead. It wouldn't hold up its share of his 265-pound frame. Five huskies carried him to his dressing room. They dumped him on a rubbing table, and Carnera mumbled: "The leg he go dead. No feel nothing. Paralyzed. Feel like piece of wood." Haynes hurt his right hand, but not badly, and will try to wipe out the stigma of two defeats at the hands of Al Ettore in a third match at Philadelphia June 22. Carnera Ls through with the American Am-erican prize ring. He sails for Italy next month, and probably will embark on a wrestling career in Europe. LN PRO FOOTBALL. MORAGA, Cal., My 28 (U.P Al Nichelini. St. Mara college star halfback in 1934, will return for another professional season with the Chicago Cardinals squad, he announced today. He was graduated grad-uated from St. Mary's this year. Additional Sports On Page 7 The business known as SHOOT AI1D SPAFFORD GOAL COMPANY Is still operating at the same place 502 South University Avenue PHOriE 17 FOR GOAL Provo Players Lead Hitting Lob Collins of the Provo baseball base-ball club is leading' the Industrial league in number of hits with 11 safeties, and Fran Dudley, with two home runs, is tops in that department. Gemmell duly is leading all teams in the hitting department with a .333 average, Magna-Oar-field comes next with .313, U.S. Mines third with .296, Provo fourth with .268 and Pinney Beverage Bev-erage is on top in this function with .963. Then comes Magna-Garfield Magna-Garfield with .960, U. S. Mines with .934 and Gemmell club with .931, Provo trailing. Al Kastellic of Gemmell is ahead of all hitetrs on an individual individ-ual basis, having smacked the ball at a .556 clip. Collins of Provo comes next with .550, then H. Smtih of Gemmell with .'500, Krisman, U. S. Mines, .450, f! Dudley Provo, .412 and Hy Facer, Magna-Garfield, .400. Other leaders: Two-base hits Walbeck, TJ. S. Mines, 3. Three base hits Tezak, Te-zak, Magna-Garfield, 2. Home runs Fran Dudley, Provo, 2. Total bases Kastellic, Gemmell club and F. Dudley, Provo, ea' 14; Walbeck, U. S. Mines, 13; Collins, Provo, 12. and Krisman, U. S. Mines il. Stolen bases H. Smith, Gemmell club; Evans Magna-Garfield; D. Dudley, Provo! and Anderson and Tedesco, Pinney, Pin-ney, each 2. Sacrifice hits Evans, Magna-Garfield; Adams, U. S. Mines, and Pressler, Pinney, 2. Runs batted in Fonty, U g' Mines. 9; Walbeck, U. S. Mines 6; Zaccaria. U. S. Mines, 4" and Maulsby, Magna-Garfield, 4. fTTONALTEAGUTl Standing of Team W. L. St. Louis 24 12 New York 24 12 Pittsburgh 18 18 Cincinnati ig 19 Chicago 17 i8 Boston 17 20 Philadelphia 15 24 Brooklyn 14 24 Wednesday's Results: P.C. .667 .667 .500 .486 .486 .459 .385 .368 ( Pittsburgh 11, St. Louis 2. Cincinnati 5, Chicago 3. Philadelphia 5, Boston 2. New York 5, Brooklyn 4 (11 innings). in-nings). ' jie AMERICAN LEAGUE Standing of Trams W. L. New York 26 13 Boston "...25 15 Detroit 22 17 Cleveland .20 17 Chicago 18 17 Washington 20 19 Philadelphia 11 24 St. Louis 9 29 .667 .625 .564 .541 .514 .513 .314 .23 Wednesday's Results: ( New York 9. Boston 8 (11 in-H nings). Detroit 3, Chicago 2. f Cleveland 12, St. Louis 2. Philadelphia at Washington postponed, rain. WHAT DO YOU ME AN THEM'S A SURE WAY FOR ME TV GET THE RIGHT REFRIGERATOR ? I MEAN JUST WHAT I SAY J BE SURE IT MEETS ALLS STANDARDS FOR , REFRIGERATOR BUYING! DfflO MAYCQCK APPLIANCE PHONE 78 51 North Univ. Ave mm, B . 6 &TJi, ft . L(r UiAM II H K I NDIANS NEW CATCHER HITS NEW YORK, May 28 U.E Billy Sullivan, Jr., Cleveland Indians In-dians catcher, appeared destined today to reach the heights attained attain-ed by his daddy, who was the top-notch league receiver when he . played with the Chicago White Sox about the turn of the century. Billy, who came to the Indians from the Cincinnati Reds of the National league this year, was used only for relief duty and as a pinch-hitter when the season began, but the roles are reversed now, with Frankie Pytlak warming warm-ing the bench and Sullivan behind the plate. Hitting the ball at a .443 clip Billy leads all American league batsmen, and is only a few points behind Manager Bill Terry of the New York Giants, who leads both leagues with .455. He has hit safely in 35 or 79 attempts. His only rival for American league honors Js Buddy Lewis, 20-year old rookie with the Washington Senators, who is making his major ma-jor league debut with a percentage of .388. Gets Five Hits Sullivan continued his assault upon American league pitching yesterday, getting five hits three singles and two doubles in six times at bat, to drive in three runs in Cleveland's 12 to 2 victory over the St. Louis Browns. Hal Trosky knocked his 10th homer as Hildebrand hurdled five-hit ball. The win put Cleveland back in fourth place. The New York Yankees increased increas-ed their league leadership to a game and a half by edging out the second place Boston Red Sox 9 to 8, in an extra inning battle. Tommy Bridges won his fifth game of the year by besting Ted Lyons in a hurling duel as the third-place Detroit Tigers defeated defeat-ed the Chicago White Sox 3 to 2, ddropping the Sox into fifth position. posi-tion. Giants Tie Cards The New York Giants pulled up into a tie for the National league lead with the St. Louis Cardinals by beating the Brooklyn Brook-lyn Dodgers 5 to 4. Frankhousc walked the winning run home in the 12th. The Cardinals were slugged all over the lot by the Pittsburgh Pirates, who triumphed 11 to 2. The Pirates took third place. Chicago Cubs fell into a fourth- place tie with the Cincinnati Reds. vno scored tive runs in the ninth Ipfrith a 5 to 2 decision over the A" Je ague champions - , auger Jimmy Wilsons pinch aouoie with the bases loaded in the eighth gave the Philadelphia r mines a 5 to 2 win over the I Boston Bees and lifted the Phils 1 OI cne cellar- I .JV 1 QUALITY TACKLE! at LOWEST PRICES from OSCAR CARLSON SPORTING GOODS CO. Special For Boyj STEEL RODS . AUTOMATIC REELS $3.25-$3.75-$6.85 REELS Plain or Multiple Specially Priced Special! True Something VIKING SHORT ENAMELED and SPORTING GOODS GO. 112 North University Ave. ; Phone 82 OUR BOARDING HOUSE WITH MAJOR HOOPLE HOD, WHAT A. STROKE OF GOOD FORTUME.UKiEARTHIKkS THVS OLD "BOX CONTAlUlMG A "DEED TO A VALUABLE TOOPETSTV AMD A WILL MAM1WO TOTTLETONi AS fclM-N -X'U SAY 'ANYONE, WEKE THE MADAM WOULT? POUWCE UPOM ASJy REWATT? X MVGHT QET X SHALL. VISIT It THE ALtERMAM t THE MORROW LeRoy Haynes No Menace; Fails To Flatten Camera By HENRY McLEMORE United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, May 28 (UP) Leroy Haynes, the big job out of Philly they have been beating the drums for as a "black menace" is only half of what the brethren who handle him claim. He's black, sho'nuff, but he's no menace, except maybe to a mass of pork chops, turnip greens and a pan of hoecake. He proved he wasn't ready to scare the wits last night when he beat on helpless help-less old Prirno Carnera without success. Carnera stayed in their eight full rcdteis with Leroy. and when he finely gave way in the ninth is wsa sprained ankle, and not punches tkat stopped him. That sprained ankle; try the wav, was one of the most bizarre injuries ever suffered by a man. ( When it came old satch was standing out in the middle of the ring, stone still, and resting squarely on the cross ties which serve him for feet. Just what 40c Tempered STEEL LIGHT FLY RODS! SflgQ Let Us Show Them To You SHANK HOOKS Special ... 2 for 25c OIL TEMPERED LINES 69c THE OL.O SQUIRREL HAS BACKED HIS CUCKOO'S NEST ALDERMAN INTO A GKEFrCI ARV TREE, NAUGHT TO HAW SONE INTO A huddle "RUSTY TIN BOK THE WAV HE'S VT, THE OLD SARDINE ON TRAP MUST BE STUFFED WITH WALNUTS. twisted it in this position is likely like-ly to ever remain a mystery. When it went bad on him, Primo leaped about after the manner man-ner of a redwood tree assaulted by tremites, and his handlers, who have been so, so solicitous of his welfare throughout the years, tenderly assisted him to the over his head, just as if he had corner and broke a bottle of water been a ship sliding down the ways. The bad ankle came as a relief to the customers, for they had grown weary of seeing Leroy "menace" the big boy without success. A chap at the ringside with a flair for figures counted the clean, right-hand chunks Le-raj, Le-raj, l&ndod o Paiiftotuito chin, and at the finish announced the total of his tally as 87. Now anybody who fails to flatten Primo with 87 throws of his Sunday punch Is no menace. 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