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Show PROVO (UTAH) EVENING HERALD, THURSDAY, MAY 27, 1937 N KNJIGHT CUP PLAY AT SAI PROVO in ri PAGE TWa OPE II 1 A DOOMS, BOOTH, STODDARD AND PARDOE NAMED With the collegiate tennis season sea-son completed. Provo racquet wielders have turned their attention atten-tion towards the annual inter-city competition for the Knight cup. This trophy, donated by J. Will Knight of Provo, is given regularly regular-ly to the city either Provo, Salt Lake City, Ogden, or Logan first winning the championship three years. In the past, Salt Lake City and Provo each has won permanent possession of a cup. The same two cities have won legs on the present pres-ent trophy, of which Salt Lake City has temporary possession by virtue of last year's triumph. Salt Lake City and Provo teams will clash in the opening 1937 match on the Forest Dale courts at Salt Lake City at 2 p. m. Saturday. Sat-urday. Provo Has Strong Team Fred (Buck) Dixon, intermoun-tain intermoun-tain singles c'nampion and coach of the B. Y. TJ. tennis team which recently won the state collegiate championship, said today that Provo netters have their eyes set xn winning the inter-city title this season. Dixon will be a member of the Provo team this summer, as he has for several seasons. Don (Sanky) Dixon, coach at Lincoln high and brother to Fred, also will play with the local Knight-cuppers. Knight-cuppers. The other three places on the team will be filled by Brig ham Young university players, probably probab-ly Malcolm Booth, Bill Pardoe, and George Stoddard. Stoddard hails from New York City, where he plans to spend the summer. Thus he will be available to play with Provo only for the first match. Lineup Announced Provo's lineup for Saturday will find. Booth and Pardoe teaming together in doubles, with the two Dlxons forming the second doubles team. Tryouts will be held Friday to determine which three play singles. Stoddard. Booth and Pardoe Par-doe are the favorites to gain the singles posts, but if the Dixons are up to par, both may earn starting positions over the collegians. Salt Luke City. 193G winner, will have another great team. Dave and Dan Freed, Dick Ben-nion, Ben-nion, Gordon Giles, and floss Sutton Sut-ton will comprise the starting lineup, line-up, according to Bob Goodell, THE THREE MOST Some men are buying all three - - - some are buying two . . . and some are buying one, depending de-pending on how large their clothing budget is. Naturally, the man with all three has the complete com-plete wardrobe, but you can be dressed cool and smart in any one of these finer summer suits! However, if you're going to buy two suits, may we suggest the linen and tropical . . . linen for dress-up wear and the tropical to wear at the -office or on cooler days if you're buying one suit e suggest the all 'round gabardine . . . the suit for every and all occasions! The Summer Our Magna-Garfield Beats U.S. Wines To Retain Lead UTAH INDUSTRIAL. LEAGUE Standing of Tecum W L Magna-Garfield 6 2 Pinney Beverage 3 2 Gemmell Club 4 3 U. S. Mines 3 4 Provo 1 3 Pet. .750 .600 .571 .433 .250 .200 ; Midvale 1 4 BINGHAM Magna-Garfield stretched its State Industrial league lea-gue lead to a game and a half here Wednesday when the Smelterites captured a thrilling 10-inning game from the local U. S. Mines nine. For nine innings Lief Erick-son Erick-son of Magna and' Manager Bill Mclvor of U.S. Mines engaged in a pitching battle, but in the tenth, with the score deadlocked 4-all, Magna-Garfield broke loose with a two-run bombardment which spelled victory. Hy Facer opened the inning by surviving on Krisman's error. Wally Walbeck forced Facer to second. Powell sent Walbeck to third with a sizzling single to right, and Morr's single drove in the first run. Erickson's bunt down the first base line scored Powell, who had reached third on Morr's single. In U.S. Mines' half of the tenth, Vecchio and Krisman flied out. and Joe Myers struck out. Flinders iof Magna-Garfield; was the leading hitter with three for five. Evans, Morr, and Erick-son Erick-son got two basehits each for the Smeltermen. For U. ST Mines, Vecchio. Adams and Reed collected col-lected a pair of bingles apiece. Sunday's schedule sends U.S. Mines to Midvale, Pinney Beverage Bev-erage to Magna, and Provo to Bingham for a game with Gemmell Gem-mell club. AMERICAN WINS SANDWICH, Eng., May 27 (U.P) Dick Chapman of Greenwich, Conn., principal American hope for the British amateur golf championship, beat Stanley Morrison Morri-son of Scotland today to reach the fifth round of the tourney. The score was 4 and 2. president of the Salt lake Tennis club. The two Freeds will play doubles, as will Bennion and Giles. Bennion, Giles and Sutton are favored to get the starting call in singles. SUMMER SUITS Headquarters For Smart Clothes Windows Tell the Style RECOVERY SEEN FOR COCHRANE NEW YORK, May 27 (U.E A slight improvement in the condition condi-tion of Mickey Cochrane, who suffered suf-fered a triple skull fracture from being hit by a pitched ball Tuesday, Tues-day, increased hopes for his rocov-ery rocov-ery today. The Detroit catcher- manager was hit in the fifth inning of Tuesday's game on the right temple tem-ple by a ball thrown by Irving (Bump) Hadley. X-Ray showed one fracture almost completely circling his head, another connected con-nected 'with one of the sinuses, and a third branchirig off of the left side. The last hospital bulletin saying say-ing "there is no change" followed one last night which said: "Mr. Cochrane is improving slowly. Signs of cerebral concussion are less, but he still faces the possibility possi-bility of infection of the sinuses and secondary meningitis." This announcement was made by Dr. Byron Stookey, one of the country's leading brain surgeons. At present no plans have been made, for an operation unless a crisis develops, Mrs. Cochrane, the only visitor permitted, was at her husband's bedside constantly. Indianapolis Auto Feature Opens Monday INDIANAPOLIS, May 27 L.R Only five of the 33 starting positions for the 500-mile race next Monday remained open today to-day as drivers resumed qualifying qualify-ing trials. Ten drivers qualified in yesterday's tests. Final qualifications qual-ifications will be held Saturday. Jimmy Snyder, Chicago, led yesterday's qualifiers with a rec-urd rec-urd average speed of 125.28T miles an hour, which virtually guaranted him the $2,000 . prize money posted for the fastest qualifying average and the fastest fast-est single lap. He turned the lap at 127.155 miles an hour. Kelly Petillo, Los Angeles, 1935 winner, qualified at 124.129; Bob Swanson, Los Angeles, 121.920; Rex Mays, Glendale, Cal., 119.-968. 119.-968. POPULAR Linen Tropical Gabardine SUMMER LINENS . $ 10 PRACTICAL $fli50 16 TROPICALS ... SMART NEW $ GABARDINES. . 119 MATCH STROKES FOR P.G.A. TITLE rr sz, ess bil Professional golfdom's royalty 116 strong is battling for the U. S. crown at the Pittsburgh (Pa.) Field Club. The winner might very well be among these expert performers. Left to right, they are Olin Dutra. Billy Burke, Jimmy Thomson. Gene Sarazen and Jim Demaret. Coast League Standing of the Teams W. L. Pet. San Francisco 36 16 .692 Sacramento 33 20 .623 San Diego 30 23 .566 Los Angeles 28 24 .538 Portland 23 26 .469 Seattle . .' 21 29 .420 Mission 18 34 .346 Oakland 18 35 .340 Wednesday's Results Oakland l 7 3 San Francisco 4 6 0 Breuer and Baker; Gibson and Monzo. (Night games) Mission 0 6 0 Portland 5 10 1 Osborne and Sprinz; Liska and Cronin. San Diego 5 8 0 Seattle 0 3 2 Chaplin and Detore; Turpin, Home and Fernandez. (First game) Sacramento 6 7 2 Los Angeles 5 8 1 Pippen and Franks; Overman, Berry and Collins. (Second game) Sacramento 4 3 o 1-ios Angeles 3 7 2 Freitas and Cooptr; Evans, Myers and Gibson. I American League! )( Standing of Teams W. L. Pet. New York 19 10 .655 Cleveland 14 11 .560 Philadelphia 15 12 .556 Detroit 16 14 .533 Boston 13 13 .r00 Chicago 13 15 .464 Washington 13 18 .419 St. Louis 9 19 .321 New York 7. Detroit 0. Chicago 6, Washington 5. Boston 11, St. Louis 0. Cleveland 8, Philadelphia 6. 3m tttf 1 bite tlw--rip tn l M Ml Nw SO C0NTMI round tfcwp. Ntw SO COHTTOi a it p. ' Brimhall B 1 ( ' 121 WEST FIRST NORTH4" - -ft National League Standing of Teams W. L Pet. .r5 .594 .586 .516 .483 .429 .387 .345 Pittsburgh 19 New York 19 St. Louis 17 Chicago 16 Brooklyn 14 Boston 12 Philadelphia 12 Cincinnati 10 10 13 12 15 15 16 19 19 Wednesday's Results Philadelphia 6, Chicago 1. St. Louis 6, Boston 4. New York 6, Cincinnati 3. Brooklyn at Pittsburgh, postponed, post-poned, rain. Breuer Reaps Tough Luck in Coast League BY UNITED PRESS The Pacific Coast league's 1937 prize for hard luck goes without with-out argument to Marvin Breuer. young pitcher of the seventh place Oakland array. Breuer provide his right to the doubtful honor again last night in taking- a 4-1 licking from the pace-setting San Francisco Fran-cisco Seals for his twelfth straight defeat. He hasn't won a game since the season started, and in lully half of his starts a little lit-tle break in the luck would have given him the victory he is so earnestly trying to earn. The Oakland youngsters held the San Franciscans to six hits last night. He gave them only one after the third inning. But in the second a pair of bingles produced two runs. In the third three safeties produced two more runs. After that Breuer was complete com-plete master but it was too late. Escalators capable of handling 8000 persons an hour have been installed in the Interior building of the U. S. federal government, the first government building to be equipped with escalators. Prov it In this n-minut fast tal is AMERICA'S MOST SKID-PROOF TIRE Take the wheel of our demonstration car and in iust ten minutes you'll discover new k driving safety. ros. PHONE 260 AMERICAN FORK BEATS HELPER AMERICAN FORK Behind the effective pitching of Dale Durrant, American Fork defeated Helper, 4-3 here Wednesday, knocking the Miners out of top spot in the Central Utah Baseball Base-ball league. It was the first loss of the season for Helper. American Fork opened the scoring scor-ing in the second by pushing across a single tally. Helper evened even-ed the count in the third, then forged ahead, 2-1 in the fourth. Tne locals got to Ed Marchetti, Helper hurler for 2 runs in the eigncn, dui Helper came ngnt back to knot the score in the first of the ninth. Not to be denied, American Fork wielded its artillery artill-ery to good advantage in its half of the ninth, and scored the winning win-ning run. Bohn, left fielder, and Manning, shortstop, garnered two hits each for the winners. Bosone, Helper second baseman, got S hree hits in 5 trips to the plate, and Woolsey centerfielder, got two. for five. The box score: HELPER AB H O A Maulsby. 3b 5 2 0 3 1 1 2 1 0 4 1 1 2 2 2 5 0 Rachelle, if Bosone, 2b Allison, ss Patrick, If Woolsey, cf Blackham, c Marchetti, p Vannatta, lb xCory 4 5 4 5 5 4 3 3 1 0 10 1 0 Totals 39 11 27 11 AMERICAN FORK AB H O 3 5 0 8 4 0 3 3 1 Barnes, rf Greenwood 4 2 2 4 0 1 2 1 1 1 1 2 0 2b Bohn, If . . . fngersoll, lb Tolton, cf 3 Dave Durrant 4 Smith, c 4 Manning 4 Dale Durrant 4 Totals Helper American Fork ... 31 9 27 13 001 100 0013 010 000 0214 Summary: Sacrifice hits Marchetti, Mar-chetti, Vannatta, Greenwood. Three-base hit Ingersoll. Two-oase Two-oase hits Bosone, Woolsey, Greenwood, Green-wood, D. Durrant, Bohn. Double play Durrant to Smith to Ingersoll. Inger-soll. Struck out by Marchetti 7, .Durrant 1. Bases on balls Off Marchetti 2, Durrant 0. Hit with pitched ball Allison, Marchetti, Tolton. Time of game 1 hour and 45 minutes. Umpire Shumway. Scorer Hanaer. if&me an Bartell. Giants 10 Medwick, Cardinals 9 Selkirk,' Yankees ".' 8 Foxx, Red Sox 7 Ott, Giants 6 Greenberg, Tigers 6 Johnson, Athletics . . . 6 Bonura, White Sox 6 Jlaadlnq Avg. Medwick, Cardinals .430 Cronin, Red Sox 421 Lary, Indians v .418 Hassett, Dodgers .v .397 Bell, Browns 390 OLYMPIC CASH ON HAND NEW YORK, May 27 (CP) The American Olympic association associa-tion has $59,564 left from last year to use for the 1940 Olympics Olym-pics in Tokyo, it was announced today as Avery Brundage, president presi-dent of the association, sailed to attend the International Olympic committee meeting at Warsaw. TITLE FIGHT PLAN FORCED NEW YORK, May 27 (UJ?) Heavyweight Champion James J. Braddock was ordered today to return to New York state by Saturday and complete his training train-ing for a title defense against Max Schmeling June 3 under a possible threat by the New York Athletic association commission to vacate his title, If he ignores the edict. Braddock is training at Grand Beach, Michigan, to fight Joe Louis in Chicago June 22, and "much too busy" to come to New York, his Manager Joe Gould, said. The commission made no mention men-tion of penalties, but most boxing observers agreed that the ruling athletic body had no alternative except - to vacate the championship champion-ship and name Schmeling as No. 1 challenger, or lose its last vestige ves-tige of prestige. Madison Square Garden went ahead with its ticket sale for the June 3 bout and Schmeling trained train-ed at his Speculator, N. Y., camp. Ogden Golf Meet Opens Tomorrow I OGDEN, Utah, May 27 CH Nearly every outstanding Utah amateur golfer was ready today for the Ogden Country club invitation invita-tion tourney opening here tomorrow. tomor-row. Qualifying rounds are set for Friday morning with first round competition in the afternoon. Second Sec-ond round and semi-final matches will be held Sunday with the title 36-hole match Monday. Ed Kingsley, Utah Copper club, winner of the Salt Lake City meet last year, is favorite to survive preliminary matches and take the crown. Birds surpass all other vertebrate verte-brate ' I nimals in muscularshr strength and activity. SEASON MAY 29th LABOR DAY Free Dancing to VERDI BREINHOLTS Orchestra AUTO PARKING FREE Sundays and Mondays Other Days 25e Per Car 'til 6 p.m. 50c Per Car Thereafter Except Holidays "DEE-LICIOUS" CHICKEN and STEAK DINNERS Oaly Shaffr Has . UTAH OFFICE 43 East Center Cougar Football Schedule Ready Brigham Young university's 1938 football schedule, pending definite booking of two intersec-tional intersec-tional games, was announced today to-day y Coach Eddie Kimball. Under the new Big Seven setup, B. Y. U. will play eight games, six league and two intersectional. Negotiations Ne-gotiations with Portland university univer-sity are being made at .present, Kimball said, in an attempt to schedule an intersectional game at Provo October 22. B. Y. U. will play California Aggies in California Cali-fornia either Thanksgiving day or October 29. Kimball also announced Brig--ham Young's complete basketball schedule for 1938. The Cougars will play each of the other Bjg Seven teams twice, making a 12-game 12-game schedule for the year. I believe th Big Seven will be a great boon to athletics in I'ne Rocky Mountain region." Coach Kimball said. "Where each team plays each other team in . the league, the athletic strength of the various schools tend to equalize. equal-ize. In competition with Colorado Colo-rado Aggies, Colorado university, Denver, and University of Utah, schools B. Y. U. has never beaten in football, we will have a hard time winning, but we expect to build until we are just as strong as the rest." Football and basketball schedules sched-ules for B. Y. U. in 1938 are as follows: Football: October 1 B. Y. U. at Denver; Oct. 8--Wyoming at B. Y. U.; Oct. 15 B. Y. U. at Utah; Nov. 5 - Utah Aggies at B. Y. U.; Nov. 12 B. Y. U. at Colorado university; univer-sity; Nov. 19 B. Y. U. at Colorado Colo-rado Aggies. Basketball: Jan. 14 B. Y. U. at. Denver; Jan. 15 B. Y. U. at Colorado; Jan. 21 B. Y. U. at Utah Aggies; Jan. 22 Utah nt R V TI lurtu 9S Colorado Agreies at B. Y. Jan. 29 Colorado at B. Y. U.; Feb. 11 B. Y. U. at Wyoming: Feb. 12 B. Y. U. at Colorado Aggies; Feb. 19 Wyoming at B. Y. U.; Feb. 25 Utah State at B. Y. U.; Feb. 26 Denver at B. Y. U.; March 4 B Y. U. at Utah. THE FUN SPOT OF UTAH! 3 1 For any lift occasion, what finer rift than Shaffr Lifatlm pan, matched nembl, or dek Mt beautiful, striking, and ruanatMd for th owner's lifetime! And, giving ao much, what gift coU ao tittle? Pm, Up - Ens om bios, S2.9S Up Dry-Proof Doak Sets, SS.OO Up SEE OUR SELECTION X SUPPLY CO. Phone 15 1 |