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Show - , r ' ' i '", t ' 'I PROVO '(UTJtH)" EVENING H E R XT D, " MON D A-Y, J U L Y 6, 19 36 PAGE FIVE r ' - '1 i Cf 7 IT, Timps End First Half By Beating Pinney 6-3 Provo Club Faces Second Half With Re newed Confidence; 'Cripples' Well Again i UTAH INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE , W. L. Pet. Magna-Garfield 11 5 .658 U. S. Mines 7 8 .467 Gemmell Club 7 8 .467 Provo 7 9 .488 Pinney- Beverage 7 9 .488 Provo 6, Pinney Beverage S. Gemmell Clnb 8, Pmney, Beverage Bever-age 1. Wednesday's Schedule U. S. Mines at Gemmell club, Bingham 5 p. m. Completing the first half title race of the Utah Industrial baseball base-ball league with a 6-3 victory over Pinney Beverage in Salt Lake City Sunday, the Provo Timps k)day were viewing second half prospects today, determined to make a sudden rise in the 'standings. 'stand-ings. ' The Timps divided a twin bill July Fourth, playing smart baseball base-ball to whip Gemmell club 6 to 5 in Provo, hen dropping a game to that same club in Bingham, 10-2. Possibilities for the second half championship are fairly bright, for the Provoans, depending largely on the mound staff. The Timps started oul the first hal in winning stride, bowling them all over. Then a plague of injuries in-juries hit the squad and it has been a crippled outfit that took thr field during the past few weeks. But Grant Ingersoll. who suffered suf-fered an injured wrist in a slide is about ready K play again, and Fran Dudley is rearing to go after nursing along an arm that was hurt at work. Lob Collins is back after vacation. Return .j batting; form of some of the regulars is another item in f:rvor of the Provo club. Vvod-bury Vvod-bury has been hitting at a fast clip lately, Treseder has found his eye again, the youngis.vrs Tezak and Patterick are pounding pound-ing out hits here arid there, and such veterans as Frank La Comb ind Buke Robison have swatted their way out of slumps .iat held them in a grip for a time. Bun Bennett, substituting at ;iird, has his consistently and played heads-up heads-up ball, while Lefty Cole, who has played in the ouiv'ield, has been a ronstant threat at the place. Sflm Christensen won the ball ,'arr.e over Pinney "Sunday, limit-ng limit-ng . ie Beverage men to six safe-:ies. safe-:ies. while his mates were climb-ng climb-ng on Ron Peacock and Bill Mc-Duffie Mc-Duffie foi nine bingles, Bennett and Trescder setting the pace.; In the game at Provo Saturday, LaComb. who ' has been . pinch-thinking pinch-thinking for Manager Otto Birk. pulled .vie old squeeze play to whip the Gemmell club. With the score tied at 5-all. Buke Robison singled in the last of the ninth, took second on a passed ball, advanced ad-vanced to third on Bennett's one base wallop, then ran home when Christensen. batting for Patterick. Patter-ick. laid down a neat bunt. v The Timps did a lot of bunting Saturday, drawing in the infield which helped pave the way for 14 ba-se hits. In the game at Bingham Em-mertson, Em-mertson, a new flinger, and Cole, chucked for the Provoans, Emmet Em-met tson being charged wi'oh the defeat James Crawford, Provo youth, played in light field for the Timps and smacked one blow. PROVO Ab. H. O. A. Woodbury. 2b 4 0 0 3 Treseder. cf . 3 2 2 0 Tezak. ss 4 1 2 2 La Comb, c 4 1 4 0 Robison, lb 4-1TT3 0 Bennett, 3b 4 3 0 7 Cole, rf 4 2 3 0 Patterick. If 3 0 3 0 Chi ustt-n.-u-n, p 4 0 0 0 Totals 34 9 27 12 PINNEY Ab. H. O. A Anderson. If 4 0 2 0 Pressler. ss '4 0 4 2 Tedesco. 3b 3 0 1' 6 Hux'ford. if ..4 10 0 A COMING S-O-O-N! acid Sadden Most Vital Picture of the Year . . . ! DELAYS NO RED TAPE re ill m nd Ratterlei MUMLiifl Hi Telluride Motor Company Phone 1000 Provo, Utah Brown, lb. 4 2 10 1 fignaiuro, cf 4 l o i Lemon, c 3. 1 7 1 Campana, 2b 4 1 3 4 Peacock, p 1 0 0 3 McDuffie, p 2 0 0 2 xMorr 1 0 0 0 Totals 34 6 27 20 xBatted for McDuffie in ninth. Provo 004 020 0006 Pinney 000 300 000 3 Summary: Errors Pressler 3, Campana, Tedesco, Tezak. Stolen base Campana. Sacrifice hits Treseder, Patterick, Christensen. Home run Pigna'taro. Two-base hits Treseder 2. Double plays Tedesco to Brown to Tedesco, Campanaa 'Ji Pressler to Brown, Tedesco to Campana to Brown. Charge defeat to Peacock. Struck out by Peacock 3, McDu?Jie 4, Christensen 4. Bases on balls off Peacock 1, Christensen 1. Hit with pitched ball Tedesco by j Christensen. Umpires Kidd and Spry. Scorer Porter. TITLE RACE IN NATIONAL GETS HOTTER DAILY i Five Clubs Still in Race For i Hunting; Cards, Cubs Fight For Top. NEW YORK, July 6 HP The National League today embraced its own lit'.e heat wave, and with first division standings changing almost daily, the most torrid flag chase in years seemed assured. Five clubs are still in the race despite the S'.. Louis Cardinals Cardi-nals and the Chicago Cubs taking most of the spotlight in their battle bat-tle for first place. The Pi,sburgh Pirates, Cincinnati Reds and New York Giants still have to be reckoned with. Only six and one half games separate the leading Cards from the fifth place Gian;; today. Every team in the first division swapped places yesterday. The Cardinals traded races with the Cubs, climbing from second and first and 'the Pirates took over third from the Reds who were reduced to fourth. Despite losing, the Giants were in a vir-ttiar vir-ttiar tie" with Cfrtcinna . ' "'Only one percentage point away from the first division. The Cards scored four runs in the ninth to send the Reds tj" defeat, de-feat, 8 to 6, in the first games, but the nightcap was a walk away 17 to 7. The Cubs, meantime, took a 4 to 2 beating from the Pirates. Brooklyn won its first game in six starts, 4 to 2, from the Giants, as Frankhouse turned the New Yorkers back with seven , hits. The Philadelphia Phillies increased Aieir winning streak to five games with a 7 to 6 decision over the Boston Bees. Jimmy Deshong turned his former New York Yankee mates back with eight hits as the Washington Wash-ington Senators batted out a 9 to 3 win. Detroit's world champion Tigers won their 13th game out of 15 starts by overwhelming the St. Louis Browns 18 to 9, and holding second place by one meagre poink in the percentage columns. The Boston Red Sox, virtually deadlocked with the Tigers, walloped wal-loped the Philadelphia Athletics twice, 16 to 2 and 8 tj 2. Cleveland and Chicago split a twin bill, the Indians taking the first, 11 to 4 and the White Sox winning the nightcap. 4 to 2. Helper Slams Price 24-10 HELPER Setting a scoring record for the season. Helper defeated de-feated Price 24 to 10 to win the first game of the Central Utah league second half Sunday. The Helperites slapped out 25 hh'i to 14 for the Price outfit. Every man but the relief pitcher got one or more hits for Helper and Woolsey paced the Price sticking with a pair of triples. In an exhibition game, Price won over Helper 13 to 4. The ame was played at Price us our DUDGET PAY PLAN No Bad to worry alonft oa old or Inferior quail ty ttro. Jut com la, today ... Slct what you nd sod tall ua how you can pay That's ail! ' EASY TEnns To Suit You AskforDudsctDcfTt Husky Oarsmen Put Oh Speed To Win Tide Ulbrickson's Crew Finish Just Short of Record; To Represent U. S. By GEORGE KIRKSEY United Press Staff Correspondent PRINCETON, N. J., July 6 (UP) A powerful University of Washington crew came from last place at the half-way mark in toe Olympic tryout finals yesterday to win the United States' title and the right" to defend a 16-year record in the 2,000 meter boat race in Berlin next month. The huskies stepped up a terrific ter-rific pace oh Lake Carnegie yesterday yes-terday to pull their slim boat past '.ue pick of the Nation's oarsmen oars-men and finish only a second and three-fifths short of the world record. Near Record WASHINGTON finished more than a length ahead of the half exhausted Pennsylvania crew in 6 minutes, 4 4-5 seconds just short of the 6:03 made by California in winning the world's Ktle at Amsterdam in 1928. California, striving to represent the United States in the Olympics for the third straight" time, finished third, a half-length behind Penn. New York A. C. came in fourth 2V6 lengths behind California. Washington's utter disdain of defeat has marked toe huskies as a crew which might accomplish and thing it sets out to do. They were so far behind inthe 4-mile race at Poughkeepsie, veteran river men conceded them no chance to win. Yet the Huskies were a length in front at the finish. Steps Up Stroke Yesterday only Bobby Moch, 119-pound coxswain of the Washington Wash-ington crew, knew the position of his boat at the half-way mark. Coach Al Ulbrickson has a rigid rule that no man in the Washington Washing-ton boat can take his eyes off the back of the man's neck in front of him. Moch's confidence in the strapping lads at his commands com-mands knows no bounds. "Get ii up, Don," barked the cocky little Moch, only senior in the Washington shell. Moch was talking to Washington's Washing-ton's stroke oar, Donald Hume, 172 pounds of power and rhythm swinging a white-tipped oar. The beat went up from" 35 1-5 to 37. And the "Husky Clipper" torpedoed torpe-doed through the water. First California was left behind. Again the beat went up under Moch's orders and New York A. C. dropped drop-ped behind. Tne pursuit of Penn was on. Washington's beat stepped up to 39 and then 40, and shortly after they passed the mile mark Penn couldn't keep the pace. Washington Washing-ton collared the Penn boat, rowed with the asterners for five or six strokes, and then gradually pulled away in a gallant finish which brought cheers from the crowd of 10,000 strung along tree-lined shore. Washington was fresh at the finish, a magnificent boaWoad of superbly conditioned athletes. AMERICAN LEAGUE I - Standing of Teams New York 51 23 .689 J?etroit 41 33 .554 f??ston 42 34 .553 Washington 40 35 .533 Hie,veland 39 37 .513 Chicago 35 38 479 Philadelphia 24 48 .333 bt- "is 23 47 .329 SUNDAY'S RESULTS Boston 16-8, Philadelphia 2-2 Cleveland 11-2 Detroit 18, St! Louis 9. Washington 9, New York 3 helpIrWs from price CENTRAL UTAH LEAGUE W- L. P.C neiper i Nephi . o Dividend o Payson o Spanish Fork 0 Price o 0 0 0 0 0 1.000 .000 .000 .000 .000 .000 1 Sunday's Results: Helper 24, Price 10. Price 13. Helper 4 (exhibition). HELPER Helper scored 14 runs in the first two innings of the Fourth of July ball game here against Price, the opening game of the second half 6T the Central Utah league. Helper won the track meet, 24 to 10. A total of 39 hits was chalked up by the two teams. Dick Brasher, Brash-er, Helper chucker, was hit hard too, but he was relieved by Mag-an. Mag-an. Suramerhays and Jewkes shared the pitching burden for Price. Two scientists in Texas have Jbeen successful in killing bacteria by producing sound waves, of extremely ex-tremely high pitch, with a nickel tube made to vibrate almost 8800 times a second by electro-magnetic coils. SPEND YOUR VACATION or a day or a Week at MAPLE DELL On the NEBO LOOP Payson Canyon Best of Cabins - 75c to $1.50 Challenger and I "?"T ?' ' "' jf"' f f 1 s-':ft. sr.'.---::-;,:-.--- ,,. V V ' t' 4 s2-. ' 3Effiuiu,riti&r,MMtifi i- - - i , ,- , - - , r1)M)1 tf t t.a A year ago. Babe Rlsko, left, lost to Freddie Steele, hard-hitting Tacoman in Seattle. Now. the middleweight champion is again in Washington, training to meet Steele in a return fight at Seattle July 10, with the title at stake. They'll meet in the Seattle Civic Stadium. V) Beautiful Gem HORIZONTAL to 1 Precious stone1 m 7 It is the r substance known. 13 Snake.' 14 English coin. 16 Underground stem. 17 Stain. 18 Imbecile. 20 Flat-bottomed boat. 21 Year. 22 Wild flower. 24 Northeast. 26 Formerly. 28 Fifth month. 31 Sound of inquiry. 33 Monkey. 34 King of Bashan. 35 Note in scale. Z6 To intertwine into fabric. 58 Theme' of a talk. 10 Smoldering coals. 12 Goddess of peace. 43 Otherwise. ' 44 Rowing tool' 45 Right. 46 Exaltation.. 51 Toward. 53 Folding beds. 55 Not stale. 56 Body of an old ship. 58 Sickles. 6t) Eccentric w wheel. 61 Eagle's nest. 62 is the chief source of supply. Answer 1 a it 1 r 1 if 11 n eri imi mil TngGEMlASl PEnK30 5 5 61 7 9 10 7T" lg 15 " H 15 " 15 17 16 "" SO Ti mmmmaam ' 45 " 4b 47 146 14? ISO "" 5 "" !1 I I ClL L IT'S "I1EIL SCIIMELING!," TOO VtJ Transformed by his knockout of Joe Louis into a national' hero, Max Schmeling was mobbed by admirers on return . to his native Germany. Ger-many. Above, Max happily accents. 'the plaudits of the throng that surrounds his car on arrival at -Berlin from Frankfurt. . In the rear of the car sits his beautiful film' star- Wife, Fanny Ondra. hamp bet for Title Go at Seattle Previous Puzzle Poker stak. Half an em. To slander. Feeling. This is urM as a cuti -g tool. To ur. 'nit. Market place. One of its faces. Skirt edge. Swimming organ. Accomplice. To agitate. Ego. House top. Circle part. 63 It is crystal- ' lized . 41 45 47 48 49 'VERTICAL 1 Flatfish. 2 Lazily. 3 To love. 4 Encountered. 5 Either. 6 Finished. 7 Nimbus. Right. " 9 Old garment. 10 Black wood. 11 Withered. 12 To attempt. 15 Brink. Baseball nine. Distinctive . theory. 50 Sound of surprise. 52 53 54 56 57 59 Hodgepodge. Tea. SnoWglider. Pronoun. Range of sight South Carolina. Lava. 61 ay 3 - k ' 1 A 4 -m v. m v .-m Am I ? " n 1 1 o jj; if ! NATIONAL LEAGUE Standing of Teams W. L. Pet. St. Louis 46 28 .622 Chicago 43 27 .614 Pittsburgh 41 33 .554 Cincinnati 38 33 .535 New York 39 34 .534 Boston 34 41 .453 Philadelphia 27 46 .370 Brooklyn 24 50 .324 i SUNDAY'S RESULTS St. Louis 8-17, Cincinnati 6-7. t'hiladelphia 7, Boston 6. Pittsburgh 4, Chicago 2. Brooklyn 3, New York 1. Two Minor Mishaps In Spanish Fork SPANISH FORK Two minor accidents marred the celebration of July Fourth at Spanish Fork. Mrs. Hannah P. Reese, about 50 years, received a cut on her head in an accident which happened when Mrs. Reese who was sitting near the band stand, was stvuck on the head by one of the steel chairs which fell down. M. B. Lindsey, 14, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Lindsey of Maple-ton, Maple-ton, received two fractured ribs late Saturday night when a driver whose name was no; learned backed his auto over the youth. who was asleep at the junior play ground. IT Now Playing DICK POWEL MARION DA VIES 1 ,iv 3 3S in "HEARTS DIVIDED" with CHARLIE RUGGLES CLAUDE RAINS E. EVERETT HORTON ARTHUR TREACHER BANK NIGHT WEDNESDAY Utah Track Stars Try For Olympics Schof ield, Cannon, Rushf orth and Thornley To Compete At Randall's Island Next Friday and -st ALLSTAR GAME SET TUESDAY BOSTON. July 6 (U.R) Unless somebody is pulling a fast one. National leaguers have ceased to regard the major league all-star game as an exhibition of glorified glori-fied talent and tomorrow will shoot the works against the American Am-erican league in the fourth annual mid-summer classic at Bees field. There seems to be a conviction in the senior circuit that its honor is at stake. With all reserved seats long since gone, some 25,000 unreserved unreserv-ed seats will go on sale tomorrow tomor-row morning, making for a capacity ca-pacity crowd of about 48,000. The Nationals haven't won a "Dream Game" since the idea was thought up to aid indigent ball players. And their entry in the 1935 world series the Chicago Cubs finished second to the Detroit De-troit Tigers. It looks as if Mose Grove will start against Curt Davis. But that's only a guess. As is the following fol-lowing starting lineup : AMERICAN Crosetti, (New York) ss Gehringer, (Detroit) 2b Dimaggio, (New York) If Gehrig, (New York) lb Averill, (Cleveland) cf Radcliff, (Chicago) rf Higeins, (Philadelphia) 3b R. Ferrell, (Boston) c Grove. (Boston) p NATIONAL Galan, (Chicago) cf Herman, (Chicago) 2b Ott. (New York) rf Medwick, (St. Louis) If Hartnett, (Chicago) c Collins, (St. Louis) lb Riggs (Cincinnati) 3b Durocher. (St. Louis) ss C. Davis, (Chicago) p NEW DIRIGIBLE RECORD FRANKFORT, Germany, July 6 l'.P The dirigible Hindenburg landed here at 1:20 a. m. today, establishing a record of 45 hours and 36 minutes for the homeward flight from the U. S. naval air station, Lakehurst, N. J. Always Cooler at the Continuous from 2 p. m. . TODAY & TUES. Joyous Jessie and Romantic Bob in a New Dance Romance! They'll Be Your Big Moment ! i .4- Jessie mflTTHEIUS I ... a I 7 ilSoVE AGAIN Robert Young: and The Comedy Feature mmt" . MOWMW PLUS, POP EYE CARTOON PARAMOUNT NEWS What Will The Next 100 Years Bring To Mankind? SEE The Amazing Prediction Of The Future Tilings to Come) LSJ I Saturday Three days of practice in the Princeton stadium, then four Utah track and field athlej'js will leave for Randalls Island stadium in New York to make the final trial for the United States Olympic team, Friday and Saturday. The four who made the eligibility eligi-bility errade bv reason of semifinal , Derformanees are Dale SehofieldL 400 meter hurdles and Hugh Cannon, Can-non, discus, both of Brigham Young university; Jack Thornley, javelin, and Knewell Rushforth, high jump. 'both of the University of Utah. Coach Ott Romney, who took the track men east by automobile, is guiding the athletes in their final workouts before the big In the National A. A. U. meet- r showdown Saturday. Saturday, the contests in which Schofield won first in the 200 meter hurdles last year, the 150-pound 150-pound Cougar runner came second ! ,n tfte 400 meter hurdles this year, ; finishing back of the great Glen Hardin, Louisiana State, who was pushed to a new American and National A. A. U. record of :51.6 by the fleet "Y" man. Hardin, who has been working on the event religiously since 1932 when he came second in the Olympics Olym-pics at Los Angeles, made a brilliant bril-liant run to beat out the Provo athlete. Schofield finished ahead of Benke of Washington State who won at Milwaukee when Schofield stumbled on the final hurdle, and he also came ahead of Osgood, Michigan, middle western champion. Cannon grabbed fourth place in the discus event, which was won by Kenneth Carpenter of U. S. C. with a throw of 1G6 feet 2 inches. Oamwn's throw was 155 feet 1-2 inch. In the high iumD event Rush. j forth cleared six feet five inches but six men went higher, three of them tying at six feet eight inches. The limber Ute will be striving to get among the top few in the finals Saturday and seems capable of adding a couple of inches to his best A. A. U. try. PLAY WEDNESDAY Bradshau Auto Parts and Sunshine Cafe soft ball teams will play Wednesday at the Franklin school, it is announced. announc-ed. Contmuous from 2 p. m. NOW SHOWING TWO STAB-STUDDED FEATURES! No. 1 and Companion Picture The Girl you raved about in "Rendezvous" leams aoout a new kind of love! GEORGE RAFT S0SAU11D RUSSELL in Leo Carillo - Ariine Judge Play Broadway Handicap Every Wednesday! . . CASH AWARDS Each Week! . 1 liviTX r 7- i 1 I III JJ r k'.i-!. ! I miwfro I si . l , t,i'm ' - IS - 2 i 3 Ah, V |