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Show It pagrXslx :r:pR&vo (utah) evening herald,?- .Monday, august; 30; : 1937 11 1 11 . . ri l " .. . .' .. . . M mi mm 1MB I I I I III V HI Oiw . V j?6fi DtuM Home . Winning Mtiti With. Eighth Inning Blow Bill McDuffic Shades Sairimy Christensen in Great Pitchers Battle; Timps End Season in UTAII INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE Standing of Teams W L Plnney Beverage ....11.3 Magna-Garfield 9 5 Provo 9 6 Gemmell Club 8 7 Midvale 4 11 Pet. .786 .643 .600 .533 .267 .250 S. Mines 3 12 Sunday's Results Pinney Beverage 5, Provo 4. Pinnev Beverage 8, Midvale 1 Majma-Garfiekl 7, Gemmell Club . 3. Pinney Beverage Sunday hurled hurl-ed back the challenge of the Provo Tlmps, then registered a triumph over Midvale to clinch the 1937 State Industrial league 'second half championship as one of the largest crowds of the season sea-son Jammed Community park at Salt Lake for the thrilling double-header. double-header. Pinney subdued Provo, 5-4, scoring the tying and winning runs in the eighth inning. Then, with at least a tie for the second half bunting assured, the Bever-agers Bever-agers pounded out an 8-1 victory over Midvale. Saturday Pinney began its two-day triumphant march by disposing of U.S. Mines, 5-3. Magna-Garfield's talented array jot base bailers wound up the second sec-ond half in second place, one-half one-half game ahead of Provo.. Mag--na defeated Gemmell Club, 7-3 Sunday, pushing the Clubmen into fourth spot, riayoff Scheduled By winning third, Provo made good the promise of Skipper Lob Collins, who told Timp baseball directors he would pilot the club to third pace. The Timps were in the running for the second half championship throughout the second Jialf race, barely losing out to the great Pinney club. Pinney and Magna-Garfield, first half champion, will launch their playoff play-off sear Ugtcrining tho-ieoguo champ next week. Sammy Christensen, Provo's chunkY little right-hander, and Bill McDuffie of Pinney, put up a great pitchers' battle. Sammy had two bad innings, the third and eighth, but outside of those instances he was pure poison for Pinney. Take Early Lead Provo got to McDuffie for two hits and one run in the first in ning. In the thirdrthe Beverag- ers eat their eyes focused andTPinney ....003 000 02x pounded out five y ale blows, tnree runs crossing the plate. ' In the sixth, Provo erased Pin-ney's Pin-ney's lead with a two-run splurge. With two men down, Wayne Mil-lett, Mil-lett, Fran Dudley and Alva Jen- Watch For Utah County's Most Startling Announcement! t Naylor Auto Co. Your Dependable Car Dealer Fifth West & Center PHONE 261 Warn To Our Many Friends in Provo and Utah County: We have been advised that unscrupulous solicitors have been soliciting business and telling the people ' that they represent us. I WE HAVE NO SOLICITORS V in the Field ait the Present Time! Ask All Solicitors to SHOW THEIR CREDENTIAL If they cannot do so, call us or notify the police at once. JEJMIIu FvliatitfE?3 JVe Call and JDeliver Anywhere In i Utah Phdtfe 345 ?66i.W6st Second North ;tt Third Place sen hit consecutively, accounting for the 'tying runs, i The Timps forged ahead, and appeared headed for victory in the seventh. Sammy Christensen led off with a. single,, his third hit of the, day. LaVar Kump bunted and was safe at first when McDuffie threw to second. Sammy beat the ball to the bag, however, ' and two men were aboard. Pinney players protested vigorously tor the umpires decis ion at second, and Fred Tedesco, third baseman, was banished from the gamCv Pinney Rallies Len Page popped up to McDuffie, McDuf-fie, and Bliss Hoover drew a base on balls, loading the bases. Dependable Wayne Millet's long fly sent Christensen home. Pinney, determined to turn back the Provoans, put on a two-run two-run rally in the eighth, scoring the tying and winning runs. With one man out Doty Bush singled and Harry Ostler did likewise. Bush raced to third, and Ostler Ost-ler went on to second as the Timps tried to nip Bush at the hot corner. Christensen struck out Lou Campana, making two down. At the juncture, Darrell Bonny, slender Pinney left fielder, drove out a timely bingle to score both runners. Bonny hit "3 for 4" in the game to tie Sammy Christensen for batting honors. PROVO A H O A Kump, ss 5 0 1 2 Page, lb 5 1 10 0 Hoover, 2b 3 0 0 1 W. Miliett, If U 1 2 0 F Dudley, rf 4 1 1 1 Collins, 3b 4 12 4 Jensen, cf 4 1 2 0 Eggertsen, c 2 1 5 1 Christensen, p 4 3 0 3 D. Dudley, c 2 0 1 0 Totals 37 9 24 12 PINNEY BEVERAGE fTeUesco, 3b 4 1 1 2 2 0 8 5 2 4 1 1 1 Pressler, ss 4 0 Huxford, rf 3 1 Owen, cf 0 0 Ostler, lb 3 1 CamDana. 2b.. cf ... .4 0 Bonny, if 4 Lemon, c 4 McDuffie, p 3 Bush, 2b 3 Cown, 3b , 0 Totals 32 10 27 12 Provo 100 002 100 4 Summary: Runs fage, Bonny Lemon, McDuffie, F. Dudley, Collins, Col-lins, Christensen, Bush, Ostler Errors Pressler, Ostler, Lemon Solen base Tedesco. Sacrifice hits Hoover, Kump. Three-base hit Bonny. Runs batted in W. Millet, Lemon, McDiiffie, Bush, Jensen 2, Bonny. Double play Tedesco to Ostler. Runs responsible respon-sible for McDuffie 4, Christensen Christen-sen 5. Struck out By MfcDuffie 4, Christensen 4. Bases on balls Off McDuffie lfV Christensen 2. Passed balls Eggertsen, D. Dudley. Dud-ley. Umpires Decker and Ewing Scorer Baker. BOY, 13 KILLED IN GUN MISHAP BOISE, Idaho, Aug. 30-tfvP) Accidental gunshot claimed the the-life of William Bach, 13, Mountain Home lad, here Sunday night. Returning from a hunting trip, he stumbled and fell against his gun, shooting himself in the head. 1 County Ji FORT D0UGLA& 1C-10 SUIIDM UTAH TEAM GOLF LEAGUE Standings of Teams W. L. T. Pet. Bonneville' ..,... 5 Fort Douglas 4 Utah Copper 2 Forest . Dale 2 Nibley Park 2 El Monte ..' 2 Provo 1 0 1 2 3 3 4 & 0 1.000 0 .800 1 1 0 0 0 .500 .400 .400 .333 .167 , Sunday's Results -Provo 16, Fort Douglas .10. Nibley-Utah Copper, postponed. j Provo golfers climaxed the 1937 season in a blaze of glory Sunday tripping, the heretofore undefeated Fort . Douglas team, 16-10. in. a brilliant exhibition of shot-making. It was Provo's first triumph of the season, and Fort Douglas' initial in-itial defeat. .The Salt Lake squad had been favored to .whip Provo, thereby retaining its tie with Bonneville for the league leadership. leader-ship. Bonneville now, becomes the favorite for the championship, The leaders will play Fort Douglas Doug-las in the final match of the season. Provo's team played superUy Sunday, taking advantage of every opportunity to score. Earl Brim, Fenton Reeve, R. A. Han sen and Jack Braunagel scored three points each for the winners. C. Nelson tallied two, and Lee Buttle and H. J. Corleissen made one each. Buttle split points with Cy Har- beke. Fort Douglas' ace, turning in a good card. Dave Crowton, Provo's No. 2 man, dropped two points to Cliff Buck, and W. L anow lost three to Bob Bird. B. Bigler accounted for three Doug las points when he shut out A. Broaddus. Score : FORT DOUGLAS Cy Harbeke ? 1 Cliff Buck 2 Bob Bird 3 Brick Wood 0 O. L. Robertson 0 R. O. fearce 1 H. W. Reiser U Charles Wardrop 0 B. Bigler 3 Todd Vonah ' 0 Total 10 Lee Buttle 1 Dave Crowton 0 W. L. Snow 0 R. A. Hansen 3 Jack Braunagel 3 rt. J. Corleissen 1 I. C. Nelson 2 uenton Reeve 3 A. Broaddus 0 Earl Brim 3 Total 16 Johnny Goodman Wins Golf Grown PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 30 -(U.Ei1 The champion amateur golf er of the country today was Johnny Goodman, who won the final round of the National Am ateur tournament from Ray By lows of Pougnkeepsle, N. Y., at Alderwood country club. Golf writers agreed that the stocky, 27-year-old Amaha In surance salesman had well earned his 2-up victory Saturday. It also was evident that in Goodman, Good-man, Billows and Marvin (Budd) Ward of Tacoma, Wash., the na tion had a nucleus for the Walker cup team that will in vale England Eng-land next year It took Goodman 36 holes in the semi-finals to eliminate Ward, 1 up. The 24-year old employe in tne Washington State tax com mission's office at Olympia, was one under par in the morning round with , a 71, but - was 2 down to. Goodman's 69. They fin ished with a total ot 142 strokes, two under par, after Ward drove home two great woods to the par o, oo-yara, seui hole to tie the match. H. PcL .187 .390 .159 .380 .183 -380 .162 .367 . 04 .364 .170 .362 Med wick, m Cardinals . . GbjtageT, Tigers . . . P. Waner, Pirates . . . Gehrig, Yankees Hartnett, Cute ...... DiMaggio, Yankees . .. TAYLOR . BROS. CO. flEAtra HITS,' r) n Dr. George E. Sandgren saw the world champion bag. puncher at work and practiced until he can do all the more difficult feats, not to mention inventing some new contrivances. Among the latter, are the perpendicular and horizontal bags, on which the Provo, Utah, teacher is very busy in the above picture. He also punches three bags at once, in as many different rhythms, one with the knees, and two with the hands and elbows. He maintains that the bags afford every opportunity for exercise that any person might need. (This picture of Mr. Sandgren was sent to the NEA syndicate by H. R. Merrill of Provo. It has appeared In hundreds of news papers using the NEA picture ser vice. Editor.) MINERS ANNEX - v TWO VICTORIES! Winding up a successful season on the diamond, Dividend, Central Utah league champion, notched up two triumphs Sunday. The Miners first defeated, U. S.. iMirws the State Industrial league, 5-2, then wound up its league play by polishing off Nephi, 6-3 Helper, C-U runnerup, ended its season with a 10-4 victory over American Fork. Smith, veteran Dividend pitcher, limited U. S. Mines to four hits. Veechio, left fielder, and Peterson, second baseman, each got two of them. Meanwhile Dividend's clout-ers clout-ers pounded out 10 bingles. Helper, state amateur champion, smacked out 16 hits in crushing American Fork. Bosone led the hitting onslaught with four hits in five times up. Earl Magann and Ed. Marchetti pitched for Helper and proved hard for the American Fork batters to fathom. 1 Ladies' Day is Baseball's Tribulation, Says McLemore By HENRY McLEMORE United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK. Aug. 28 (U.R) One of life's true delights is to be with one girl, on one 'beach, in a leafy park when the moon is shining. But multiply that girl by 25,-000 25,-000 and move the result into a baseball park where the sun is shining, and boys, you've really got one of life's true tribulations. X X X X I know now where that expression ex-pression "Black Friday' comes from. Friday is always ladies' day In a baseball park, and yesterday I sat through one as the Pirates played the Giants in the Polo grounds. x x x x , It tHas my first ladies' day. And it will be my last 4intil the memory ofit fades away, whicn should make me safe until near the turn- of the century. 1 Ladies' day becomes a, menace the moment you arrive at .the park and try to get through , the gates. The ladies, fcless their gentle... high-heeled soles, charge the turnstiles with the dangerous abandon of a pack of pettticoabid panthers.. And the looks they give you as .they rush" pell-mell toward the entrances; Rie one you get from, a woman gcorsted Is mild compared to the one you get from a woman blocked on her way to the tax booth. x xxx No woman : at ladles da,y hasr ever sat down In a seat ami taye4 there during the entire. gatnsC She. eltheri seeis a eeat wUc sb tlimk 1 , Detter, ror; els slie sees some-; oiioeilmowiaiidlixit ttus ,yislt ;T1mj rwilt, when,. 25,000 gala aredoing, the sam? tfdnsr taXremlndful walkathon, or a cmtlnuous v seventhrln-. : ,lnr stretch. " ' t: - 1 For some - reason . -'unknowtvv o science4 thQ, sight ; , of a baseball came -.works :a,i profound change on -he. vocal chords v pfl the Inore dangerous and siluer sex-rNa'iaat- ,NEW .YORK; ,Aug.f0. ,OR) r-Salient r-Salient facts on tonight's world heavyweight championship, fight; PLACBu Yankee Stadiumthe. official abattoir, of the New York Yankees' baseball team. It is the. 8tadluni;;.lni October, ihat .; the team unlucky enough, to win!.-, the National League pennant .will be f pole-axed. It Is such frighten ing place that the cubs look one Blow-hy-Wowt, , jftescripthws of the- Tommy Farr-Joe Louis) heavyweight fight . tonight will be broadcast fronx Yan-he4 Yan-he4 Stadium over .oostjtc-eoaatu .oostjtc-eoaatu Blue, and -Red networks net-works of the National Broadcasting Broad-casting f company j This aimouneenafcn is made by Bum Traher, . of .Jtusa Traher Inc. The broadcast Is sponsored by the Buick Motor 'division of General Motors Sales corporation. , , JfX3tem. McCarthy, ap.ort fCommentatar, - and JSdwin C. II1U, newspaper writer, will be. announcers for the fourtn time In major fight contests con-tests sponsored by Buick. The fight Is slated for 10 p.m. EDST or 1 p. nx, Mountain Standard time. : : , : look at its chilly rampart from the polo grounds yesterday; and meekly handed the Giants two games. PRINCIPALS: Joe Louis 23, the color of Aunt Emma's carmel custards, social lion of Harlem's Sugar hill, and the, only man in America who can be arrested !for carrying concealed weapons whenever he puts .his hands in his pockets " .TOMMY .FARR: 23, has a face like a professional house-haunter, born in Tony Pandy, Wales, which is a place known only to Tommy and Rand McNally, talks want to talk to you i : IS I Mi art J9akatc DiMaggio, Yankees 38 Foxx, Red Sox 32 Gehrig, Yankees SO Greenberg, Tigers Ott, Giants Medwick, Cardinals 27 York, Tigers 27 X - I Coast League WW . Standing of Clubs W. L. Pet. Sacramento 88 65 .575 Sah Diego 88 66 .571 San Francisco 83 71 .539 Los Angeles 80 74 .519 Portland 75 75 .500 Oakland 73 81 .474 Seattle 67 86 .438 Mission 59 95 .383 Sunday's Results Missions 5-3, Sacramento 3-4. Portland 3-1, San Diego 1-10. Seattle 7-3, San Francisco 13-8. Los Angeles 2-2, Oakland 5-4. ter what quality voice a woman -ordinarily has, the second she sits down in a baseball park she becomes be-comes a falsetto soprano with squeak attachments. There is no 'other sound in the world that duplicates that made by women when confronted with the national nation-al pastime. The nearest approach to it is the cry given off by persons per-sons frightened in their sleep, and that of lambs when the most observing ob-serving member of their party detects de-tects the waistcoat of a wolf beneath be-neath the sheepskin coat. X X X X Ladies day patrons used this cry without letup from . the first oltch to the., final out. They employ It on friend and toe, foul pop and three-bagger alike. Nothing tq. too. spectacular,, nottdng, is too sterotyped, to escape it Occasionally It s defyvered from a sitting., poeture, ... but most of th time the women are on their fojL aturafly thls 'worka .a hardship on tie men spectators; becauae)for all their. daAntinee and aweet- ness, gals ,ATfn.t transparent. So to see wiiars going on, the men have .40 stands too, and this Is very wearing and. tearing tear-ing on arches accustomed to heingpnt t naevwhen eomethlng out of the ordinary tae( place, , x x . x x ,. .-To .-To escape this, men who attend an , ladles' day . usually attempt to get, there.bfirstt and take all the front fpWrfeat4 . But .a-. battle-scarred battle-scarred ; old , olo, grounder, who loves the Giants so much he cant stand to mlas a day, told me that this was ' very difficult' ; : ... 'There Just isn't, such .a thing as beating the women here he sighed. "They seem to have dis-. covered 'our plot, and. make, .it a point tov get po the park .shortly after sun-up. I. believe'" -that',' a third party ruiming; on ik platform; plat-form; that called for the abollsh-fnent abollsh-fnent of ladies', day, would havo a real 'chance In 1940 " . .".r tyke; Something, out 1 of 4 Dickens, and wiU ge,t the Dickens knocked out'ic3hlm.tonlght .Ai U?- i l-m vE9mbay; U obon,vaSydney; ;4. i; Moscow; and-rlft p, in.i.Wevf Xorfe .that is. If. yourx watch iawrrectvtVr . ESTIMATED ATTENDANCE : (By Promoter Mike Jacobs); 60,: , ESTTMATE , 's ATTEKDANiCE: (by-unbiased rparties)t 35.000. FARR'fJ CHANCE OF TAKi NG .TITLE; About the, v sa.me a fellowwould Jhava c i making 4'p-'iV. whicjv if rm no cpnf using : it. with Stadia, is singular fox dice. . . w. ' Loins' CHANCES OF REr f TAINING TITLEi ..All Joe has to dp .is, avoid rigor nortis, measles and housemjiids' knee. BETTING ODDS: There is no betting. The one man who showed show-ed up : with some Farr money was erabbed. by the Smithsonian Institute, and today swings from the ceiling along with Lindbergh's Spirit of St. Louis and Eli Whitney's Whit-ney's cotton gin. . WEATHER: For Farr Stormy with lightning flashes. For Louis just a light breeze. WEIGHTS: Farr about 14 stone, and each one will seem a millstone along about 10:17 p. m. Louis 193 pounds, or about one a second for the time it will take him to finish the thing. REFEREE: ' Unnamed as yet, but likely to .be chosen from the 10 highest ranking students of the upper Long Island school 01 embalming and repair. SCHEDULED DISTANCE: 15 rounds, and for the benefit of those who think it will go that far my telephone number is Hy-water Hy-water 9-3343. If. I'm not In please leave your number, because I Jenkins Redely to Try for Records BONNEVILLE SALT FLATS, Utah, Aug. 30 (UJI) Ab Jenkins, Utah's ace automobile racing driver, was scheduled to start his attempt to lower the 48-hour speed record tomorrow. His Mormon Meteor reached 160 and 171 miles an hour in te rens-yesterday over a wet course Fair weather ana sun - shine was expected to put the track in good condition for his run tomorrow. After completion of the Meteor run, Jenkins plans to attempt to establish a new stock car speed record.. American League Standing of the Teams W. L. Pet. New York 80 36 .690 Detroit 68 49 .581 Chicago 68 53 .562 Boston 64 51 .557 Cleveland 58 57 .504 Washington 54 60 .474 St. Louis 37 80 .316 Philadelphia 36 79 .313 Sunday's Results Boston 2-3, St. Louis 0-8. Cleveland 11-2, Washington 4-6. Philadelphia 16-3, Chicago 0-5. New York 7, Detroit 4. r I National League Standing of the Teams W. L. Pet. .605 .603 .542 .521 .479 .424 .414 .407 Chicago 72 New York 70 St. Louis 64 Pittsburgh 62 Boston 57 Philadelphia 50 Brooklyn 48 Cincinnati 46 47 46 54 57 62 68 68 67 Sunday's Results Brooklyn 5-6. Pittsburgh 3-3i Boston 3-0, St. Louis 2-3. Philadelphia 10-1, Chicago 3-2. New York 7, Cincinnati 2. -Ju. y fc - ve GOOD GRIEF! Economists, creeping out from behind stacks, of figures, calmly calm-ly , announce that the , world's gold supply is getting too large. Nevertheless, after the recent lean years, it's a pleasant change to worry about having too much! TPO MUCI emphasis, cannot be. placed oa the need for adequate ade-quate automobile - insurance protection. We offer you maximum maxi-mum security at minium cost. Visit m NOW! 13 miiis, barr Await Gong; Champion Is Ton-Heabv Fa m mr Odds Quoted At 6-1 On Bomber As Fight Approaches; Challenger Boasts Good Defense; Receipts To Be SirihH U-l SOFTBALL CLUB IN STATE FINAL TONIGHT Trusting in their great pitcher. !King Kong Kelly, Utah-Idaho ; Sugar company of Spanish Fork will go into the state softball h finals against Lang Welding .of. RSalt Lake City tonight, favored to win the title and the trip to the national tournament at Chicago Chi-cago next month. Utah-Idaho and Lang Welding have walked through four blistering blis-tering rounds of competition triumphantly. tri-umphantly. The latter ended the threat of Pacific Super Heaters of Provo Saturday night, trimming trim-ming the Garden City entry, 8-6 in a close battle. Welding made 11 hits to Super Heaters' 10. Sunday the Salt Lake outfit disposed of General Electric, another an-other Capitol city aggregation, 4-1 as Mackay, ace pitcher, limited limit-ed the Electric squad to four hits. Utah-Idaho, led by Kelly and LaMar Weight, downed Pinney Beverage of Salt Lake, 4-1 Sunday Sun-day after overwhelming Utah Oil, 7-1 Saturday. In the latter game, Leonard Stone, former pitcher for Bradshaw Auto Parts of Provo, hooked up in a pitchers' pitch-ers' battle with Kelly, but was outclassed, Kelley yielded but two hits, the same number he gave Pinney Beverage. The hitting of LaMar Weight In Sunday's game was sensa-H Uonai. In the first inning he whacked the ball over the right field fence for a home run, scoring scor-ing Rowe ahead of him. Then in the eighth, he cracked another homer in the same place. Spanish Fork's other run - was seored -in 1 me muu wnen juh hcu uH a error, and scored on singles by Harrison and Beck. Pinney's lone score came in the third. Tom Marsh singled and scored when Percy Schmucker's grounder was hobbled by a U-I Sugar player. Tonight's game will be played at 8:30 p. m., at White park. Food Cooked in Ice With Short Waves VIENNA, Austria (American Wire) Cooking food in ice by means of radio short waves was demonstrated here recently by Professor A. Z. Kovarczik, famous fa-mous Austrian physicist. In a large basin of water reduced re-duced to the lowest temperature at which it would remain liquid, the professor put several large living fish. He pressed a button.' The fish were killed instantly and in a few minutes were perfectly per-fectly cooked. The water remained remain-ed ice cold. A raw beefsteak was put into the basin and frozen into a cube of ibe. The short waves were turned on.- The beefsteak was cooked to a turn inside the block of ice. "Ev6 S ir.-tiK-r.---: "I SQMricff, . . . Drink Arden pas tedrized ihilk and gei intd shape!-- fflils MILK i qREAil -EGGS COTTAGE CHEESE - BUTTER " ' i vonte BY HENRY MCLEMORE United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Aug, 30 01?) The delayed fight for, the heavyweight title between Champion Joe Louis of Detroit and Challenger Tommy Farr of Wales Wtt be held tonight in Yankee stadium. The weatherman predicts scattered scat-tered showers today and the title go may be postponed until tomorrow to-morrow night, but only as a last resort. Promoter Mike Jacobs believes be-lieves that the four-day delay helped the gate to the extend 'of $50,000 and that the total will hit $325,000. But it is generally agreed that another postponement will hurt. Louis and Farr will motor In from their New Jersey training camps and weigh in at the boxing commission offices shortly' after noon. Joe still held his Thursday's weight of 198 pounds after road-work road-work and limbering exercises yesterday, yes-terday, and Tonypandy Tommy had taken off four pounds and was down to 203. Despite all the talk that the four day postponement would burt the chances of Louis more than those of Farr, the bomber still will go into the ring a heavy favorite. fa-vorite. Louis may go into the ring at 7-1 instead of 6-1 as he was quoted Thursday. The trip to. the canvas that Farr took from : a punch of Abe Feldman Friday didn't bring any new money scurrying scur-rying to his support. There was more interest today in what Promoter Jacobs might do toward arranging a return Louis-Max Schmeling engagement. Uncle Mike put the boys on edge when he announced, "I might knock you right off your pins with a headline storv right after Louis and Farr get thrpugh tonight. "I'm a promoter and I always like to put oh big fights. Don't be surprised at anything"" This was interpreted along cauliflower cauli-flower allev .as meaning that Jacobs Ja-cobs already had signed Schmeling Schmel-ing to meet the winner of tonight's to-night's affair. EASON OILERS IVIN BALL TITLE WICHITA, . Kans., Aug. 30 uj.kj me luason Oilers of Enid, Okla., today held the national semi-pro baseball championship, the reward of their triumph in last night's finals game with the ouioru, km., Buna-Aliens, 7 to 4. Victory, which carried a $5,000 prize, came after two weeks of competition at Lawrence stadium, in a survival over 32 entries from every section of the country. Undefeated in seven starts, the Oilers won their final game with a fusillade of batting , power, which repelled three hurlers for 12 hits. Bus Talley, the- winning pitcher, allowed only four safeties. safe-ties. The crowd of 15,000 was the largest ever to witness a baseball game in Kansas. ... t J"-, |