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Show PROVO (UTAH) EVENING HERALD, THURSDAY, JUNE 24, 1937 E NINE SUNDAY PKOVO TIMPS PAGE TWO MEET MIDVA1 Collins 9 Gang Bows To U. S. Mines Crew In 15 to 10 Battle Local Boys Figure To Climb Out of the Cellar Cel-lar At the Expense of Invading Midvale Lads in Sunday's Game Here IT AH INDUSTRIAL. LEAGUE W. L. Pet. I Pinney Beverage ... 10 3 .769. Magna-Garfield 11 4 .733 1 Gemmell Club 8 5 .6151 U. S. Mines 5 9 .357 ! Midvale 3 9 .250, Provo 3 10 .'31 I Wednesday's Result U. S. Mines 15, Provo 10. Sunday's -Schedule Midvale at Provo. Gemmell at Iinn-y Ie erage (2). BY LAVEKL CHRISTEN SEN Provo Timps, sole occupants of the cellar position in State Industrial In-dustrial league standings for the first time this season, will attempt at-tempt to snap out of the doldtums Sunday w'nen they play host to Midvale at Timp park. All season Provo and Midvale have been waging a lively hattle each trying desperately to avett the cellar. Their meeting heie Sunday should be a thriller. In their only meeting to date, the Timps won on the Midvale diamond. dia-mond. Wednesday Provo took a 15-10 lacing at Bingham when the U. S. Mines battels turned on all their power. Manager Ixb Collins of Provo used three pitchers, but none could stop the Miners. U. S. Mines scored four iuns in the first inning, two m the second, sec-ond, and five more in the fifth, enough tallies to insure victory. Provo "began hitting George Sluga. Minns hurler. in the fourth inning. The Timps rallied desperately des-perately in the closing innings but were stopped cold alter boosting boost-ing their total to 10. Len Page. Provo first sacker. recovered his hitting eye. getting two bingles in three times up. He caught one of Sluga's offerings for a home run in the seventh. Vecchio and Sluga each hit round-trippers round-trippers for U. S. Mines. Box score: PROVO B 4 f 5 5 t 4 3 o 1 11 2 0 () Ginder. IF Collins, 3b Hoover, cf D. Dudley. F. Dudley. Bianting :.. Paur. 2b. . Page, lb . Peacock, p Christensen 0 o o 5 0 o 4 10 o o c rf Uncle Bill's Place Formerly Opposite THE SILVER DOLLAR - COLUMBIA STEEL PLANT Completely Renovated and Remodeled Specializing in Trout - Chicken and Steak Dinners Sandwiches - Salads - Short Orders - Beer Jumbo Malted Milks Operated hy BILL FOX Plenty of Parking Spai-e (Off the Highway and ate ring to fridge Luncheons and Private Parties Vulcanizing HI-VALUE USED TIRES 60016 55017 NEARLY NEW Fair Prices SPECIALLY EQUIPPED TO VULCANIZE ALL SIZES UP TO 32x610 Ply o o o o BI&0)iriKnEIRS Phone 260 121 0 0 0 0 10 A. 0 0 3 0 4 0 0 3 0 Mattson, cf 4 1 4 G leave, rf 3 Adams. c-3b 4 Sluga. p 5 Myers, 3b 3 Krisman. 2b 4 Vecchio. rf 4 Reed, lb 5 Thompson, s 4 Gates, c 2 0 4 1 1 3 2 10 0 o Totals 38 Score by innings: 16 27 12 iovo 100 130 203 10 U. S. Mines .... 425 101 Ux 15 Summary: Errors Ginder, Thompson. D. Dudley. Paur. Sluga. Stolen bases Branting 2, Krisman. Home runs - - Sluga, Page, Vecchio. Three-base hits-Myers, hits-Myers, Adams, Vecchio, Reed. Two-base hits Hoover 2, Gleave. Gates, Ginder, Kump. Double plays Myer to Krisman to Reed; Adams to Krisman to Reed: Collins Col-lins to Paur to Page; Branting to D. Dudley to Collins to Paur. Innings In-nings pitched Peacock 1-3, Lancaster Lan-caster 5 2-3. Christensen 2. Charge defeat to Peacock. Struck out-bv out-bv Sluga 5, Lancaster 5. Bases on halls off Lancaster 1. with pitched Wild pitches pi res Decker Sluga 7. Peacock 2. Christensen 1. Hit ball Paur by Sluga. - Lancaster 2. Urn- and Peacock. Scor- er S. Smith. Mako Leads U. S. Netters in Meet WIMBLEDON, England. June 24 'IT' Gene Mago of Los Angeles An-geles led the American group iato the round-of 16 in the all-England all-England men's tennis champion- ! ship todav by defeating the Chinese Davis "Cup player. Sin ', Kie Kho. 3-6. 6-1. 6-2, 6-4. I Queen Mary arrived at the 'royal box at' 3 p. ni. She was .the first member of royalty to witness Wimbledon tennis thifc 'year. Vivian MeGrath of Australia Aus-tralia and Josef Pallada of Jugo- BILL SPENCER Coolest Plaee in the County! Prices Right West First North Lancaster, p 2 0 1 Jensen, rf 1 0 0 xKump 1 1 o xxEggertsen 1 0 0 Totals 39 14 24 xBatted for Lancaster in ninth xxBatted for Ginder in ninth. U. S. MINES B. H. O. DEB DUDLEY IS LEADING HITTER Provo players are well among the State Industrial league leaders lead-ers in every batting- department, it is revealed in the official tabulation tabu-lation of John E. Barrett, league statistican. Earl Owen, giant Pinney Beverage Bev-erage outfielder, leads the individual in-dividual hitting parade with a .413 percentage. Morr, Magna, and Kastellic and Zaccaria, Gemmell, Gem-mell, follow close behind, with Deb Dudley, Provo's slugging catcher, trailing in fifth place. Dudley has poled out 18 hits in 48 times at bat for a .375 percentage. Included in his collection col-lection are two two-base hits and a pair of three-baggers. LaVar Kump. clever little Timp second baseman, is second among the Provo batters with an average aver-age of .346. Frank Branting. shortstop, is just behind with .327, three percentage points ahead of Outfielder Fran Dudley. Branting leads the Timps in number of total bases, 25. a department de-partment in which Frank Zac-caria Zac-caria of Gemmell leads the league. lea-gue. In runs scored. Occie Evans and Hy Facer of Magna hold top spot with 12 each. Gates of U. S. Mines heads the league in two-baggers with six. Leading Provo players are Frank Branting and Lob Collins with three apiece. Three Provo-ans. Provo-ans. Deb Dudley, Collins, and Joe Paur have two three-base hits to their credit, but trail Vecchio of U. S. Mines and Ostler of Pinney in that department. Fran Dudley has two home runs, two behind Frank Christensen of Magna who has four. Following are the batting per-eenteges per-eenteges of the Timps:: Deb Dudley 375; Kump .346; Branting Brant-ing 327; Fran Dudley .324; Christensen Chris-tensen .300; Collins .262; Paur .258; Hoover .238; Jensen 235; Cole .235; Ginder .229; Page .115; Iancaster .125; Edgarson, King. Overly and Peacock .000. Coast League Standing of the Teams W. L. Pet. Sacramento 51-30 .630 San Francisco 49 33 .598 San Diego 47 37 .560 Los Angeles 43 37 .538 Portland 38 42 .475 Seattle 38 43 .469 Oakland 30 52 .366 Mission 30 52 .366 Wednesday's Results Seattle ' 10 16 1 San Francisco 4 10 4 Thomas. Pickrel and Fernandez; Ballou and Monzo. Portland 2 5 0 San Diego 3 8 0 Radonits and Cronin; Hebert and j Starr. I i Night games I Los Angeles Oakland Thomas and Gibson; Olds and Baker. 2 8 1 3 5 0 Bonhani. Missions 2 7 0 Sacramento 4 9 5 Babich and Sprinz; Freitas and Cooper . American League; M the Standing of the Trams W. L Pet. ,NVW York 34 20 .630 Detroit 33 23 589 Chicago 31 25 .551 Boston 27 23 .510 Cleveland 27 26 .509 Washington 25 30 .455 St. Louis 19 33 .365 Philadelphia 18 34 .346 Wednesday's Results Chicago 2, Philadelphia 0. St. Louis 6, New York 3 Boston 6. Detroit 5. Washington 14, Cleveland 5. National League Teams Standing of the W. L. 34 21 Pet .618 .600 .596 .564 .462 .393 .389 .370 Chicago . . . St. Louis . . New Yor k . Pittsburgh . Brooklyn Philadelphia Cincinnati . Boston . . . . 33 34 22 23 31 24 24 28 22 34 21 33 20 34 Wednesday's Results Pittsburgh 8, Boston 5. New York 8, Chicago 4. Philadelphia 3, Cincinnati 0. St. Louis 3, Brooklyn '2. WOMAN, 100, UKES TO WORK WIN CHEN DON, Mass. r.P -Though 100 years old, Mrs. Maria Wallace is able to do housework. She makes her own bed daily, refusing re-fusing the aid of her granddaughter, granddaugh-ter, Mrs. William Walizer, with whom she lives. slavia, who were playing on the cellar court, stood at attention and then bowed to the queen mother. She acknowledged the greeting. MeGrath went on to beat Pallada, Pal-lada, 4-6, 6-3, 7-5, 6-2. .. Jack Crawford of Australia reached the round of 16 by beating beat-ing Franja Kukeljevic of Jugoslavia, Jugo-slavia, 6-3, 6-2, 10-8. THREE WOULD HBW;,liW..iwW.'UJ,"" """""""" mmmm mm mm mm mmm mmm In the old days, "on a bicycle built for two" was considered the acme of romance. But Ethel du Pont and Franklin D. Roosevelt. Jr.. happily share the less strenuous roadster built for two. THIRD LEADING ELDERS LEAGUE KI.DKKS' l,KA(il K Softball Standings W L Pet Third 4 0 1 000 Bonneville 3 1 .750 Second 1 3 .250 Fifth 0 1 .000 Wednesday' Kr suits Third 7, Fifth' . Bonneville 16, Second 12. Third ward kept up its undefeated unde-feated pace in the Elder's soft-ball soft-ball league Wednesday, shutting out Fifth. 7-0. The victory kept Third a full game ahead of Bonneville, which trounced Second, 16-12. in a slugfest. AND 100 OTHER TIMES WEAR WASHABLE SLACKS OTHERS $1.98 Keep cool, comfortable and smart this summer in Moso Lewis' slacks .... we have them in all the new patterns, checks and solids .... all pre-shrunk Mose Lewis Tomorrow's Styles Today! BE A CROWD Pet. 414 .385 .365 .362 .361 Medwick. Cards . Gehrig, Y.inkres Hassett. Dodgers Y.iugrnn. Pirates Walker. Tigers . UKKS KOl'T A I "TO THIEF HAMILTON. Ont. f.P A thief stole Isaac Balmer's automobile j but abandoned it after driving- a ! mile when he discovered that it i contained 20,000 bees. Additional Sports On Page Seven L S? I 1 SXJ I tmmj GIANTS, CARDS GAIN ON CUBS NEW YORK, June 24 lT.R Baseball's big attraction today was the torrid National league pennant race with only one game separating the league-leading Chi cago Cubs and their two bitter rivals, the Cardinals and Giants Pittsburgh, in fourth place was only three games off the pace. High spots in yesterday's games : 1 Carl Hubbell. after being knocked out of the box six straight times, regained the winning- touch and pitched his first complete game since May 19 to beat the Cubs. 2 Dizzy Dean, despite another display of temper, had luck on his side as the Cardinals beat the Dodgers on four hits. 3 The Chicago White Sox blanked the A's, 2-0. on three hits, two of which were homers by Mike Kreevich and Luke Ap Pling. 4 The Boston Bees and Phil adelphia Athletics collapsed. The Bees lost their 11th straight games and the A's their ninth in a row. 5 Hank Greenberg hit a homer with the bases loaded in a los ing cause. Paul Waner had a per feet day at bat, " 4 for 4"; Hugh Mulcahy hurled a four-hit shutout against Cincinnati; Washington Wash-ington gathered 17 hits which gave the Senators their fourth stra ight. Hubbell pitched the Giants to an 8-4 victory over the Cubs. With an eight-run lead In rased up in the eighth and the Cubs pounded out four runs. Ber ger. Ott and Leslie hit homer? for New York. Hubbell's record is now nine won and three lost Dizzy Dean pulled through to lus 11th victory when the Cards beat the Dodgers, 3-2. ft Greenberg, Tigers 16 DiMaggio. Yankees 15 Medwick. Cards 15 Selkirk. Yankees 13 Foxx, Red Sox . 13 THE THREE MOST Some men are buying all three . . . some are buying two . . and some are buying one, depending on how large their clothing cloth-ing budget is. Naturally, the man with all three has the complete wardrobe, but you can be dressed cool and smart in any one of these fine summer suits! However, if you're going to buy two suits may we suggest sug-gest the linen and tropical . . . linen for dres-up wear and the tropical to wear to the office or on cooler days if you're buying buy-ing one suit we suggest the all 'round gabardine gab-ardine . . . the suit for every and all occasions ! The Summer MOSE Louis-Schmeling Bout Slated Next CHICAGO, June 24 il.lN Heavyweight champion Joe Louis .oday began a game of hide-and-.scek with a reluctant "white hope' - Max Schmeling of Germany. Jolting Joe was so anxious to avenge his knockout by Schmel-.ng Schmel-.ng that he reversed the usual procedure and challenged the challenger. If Max finally accepts an offer for the return light, they likely A-ill meet at Comiskey park next September in the same ring in A'hich the dusky champion crushed crush-ed Jimmy Braddock Tuesday night. Schmeling, however. appears content to fight Tommy Fan. English and empire champion, in i London bout billed "lor the heavyweight championship of the world." Even without a Schmeling match, Louis still can be "the . iehtingest champion vet." Pro moter Mike Jacobs extended hi? contract with the champion until 1942 and added an agreement guaranteeing him at least foul fights a year if he can dig up four suitable foes. The bomber s co-managers. Jul lan Black and John Roxborough tore up their old contract signed shortly after Louis won his first big money battle from rnassivt Primo Camera Iouis (iets $9(.(MH) joc- planned to t-ave lor Detroit De-troit todav after collecting his 17'.. per cent of the S51S.380 50 net receipts for- fighting Brad-.loek. Brad-.loek. His .-hare will he approximately approxi-mately $90,000 after salaries of ring officials for the bout are deducted. de-ducted. Braddock. who for- his only title to quit after his and accepted a lined $25.190.25 defense, refused terrific beating three-vear con- tract with Jacob.-. Courageous Jimmy believes a few more bouts possil ly with Maxie Baer. Tommy Va i i . or Bob Pastor would bring bai k the youth in n;.- leys and give him an even break with Louis in a second title fight. The former champion received no serious injury from the bomber's bomb-er's merciless barrage Kit the left side of his face was a mass of bandages covering cuts over- his eve. on his cheek and above the lip. Louis was unmarked except lor tinv cuts on each ear. SUMMER SUITS Headquarters For Smart Clothes LEWIS Tomorrow's Styles Today! UTAH NEHEN OUT OF MEET HAVERFORD. Pa. In a torrid battle which extended 38 games, Dick Bennion, University of Utah, lost to Carl Fischer of Western State Teachers' college in a third round match here Tuesday, thus ending Utah's last hope for producing pro-ducing a national intercollegiate tennis champion. Bennion's smashing net game and hard service proved insufficient insuffi-cient as he lost to Fischer. 6-0, 11-13, 6-2. Pairing with Dan Freed in the doubles, Bennion lost in the first round to Wacht-man and Rugg of Northwestern. 6-4.. 6-3. George Stoddard and Kirk Stephens, B. Y. U. stars, defaulted to Sutter Sut-ter and Abrams of Tulane. The singles tourney advanced to the fifth round Tuesday, with sixteen players from widespread areas set to battle it out for the championship. Ernest Sutter, defending de-fending champion. is the top-heavy top-heavy favorite to repeat. NEPHI WALLOPS AMERICAN FORK Baseball play in the (ntral Utah league will come to a climax cli-max Sunday when Helper invades in-vades Dividend for a telltale iioubleheader. Dividend leads the circuit with rune victories and one defeat, while Helper- is just behind with seven triumphs and two losses. Nephi insured itself of third place by tnnuving American Fork. 1S-9 in a game played on the latter's diamond Wednesday. Nephi's slugging delegation hammered out 23 hits, fattening their batting averages. The winners win-ners scored eight runs in the lointh inning. Bohn of American Fork arid I.unt of Nephi poled out home runs Cowan anil Brady collected four hits each for the Wheat City boys. F1NOKKPKINTS TAK F.N KENT. O 'IT' Under sponsorship sponsor-ship of Kent State university, students are visiting the Kent substation of the state highway patrol to have their fingej-pnnts registered for identification m event of accident. POPULAR :: Linen :: Tropical :: Gabardine SIMMER L I N E N S $10 $16 TROPICA L TROPICALS SMART NEW GABARDINES $19 |