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Show pge fotje PROVO (UTAH) ; - EVENING? HERALD, MONDAY, APRIL 11, 1938 dfoool Ousadirainigiuilair Track Meet Slated Tlmirsday High Provo, Spanish Fork, Springville , Pay son Will Test Strength Provo Favored To Win Four-cornered Track Meet At Spanish Fork; Springrville, Spanish Fork Loom Strong Rivals Local high school track teams get their first taste of competi tion Thursday afternoon when Provo, Springville, Spanish Fork and Payson meet in a quadrangu lar meet at Spanish Fork. Provo high looks like the team to beat again this year. The Bulldogs Bull-dogs are almost as strong as last season when they romped off with the division and state titles. The champs go into Thursday's contest as the favorite to repeat. Last year, in the same meet, they ran up 78 lj points against Spring-ville's Spring-ville's 72. Payson had 47,2. and Spanish Fork scored 20. Reports from Springville indicate indi-cate that the Red Devils will put another for midable team into the meet. Spanish Fork is expected to.be much stronger than they were last season. Payson is not given much chance of placing too far up the ladder. The third place winners of last ytar lost Cy Ellsworth, state sprnt champion. Ellsworth made almost half of his team's points in practically every county meet last season. Coach Glenn Simmons of the Bulldogs, will take a big squad to Spanish Fork. Boys picked to win points at the meet are Johnson John-son and Cook in the 440, and Bill-:ngs Bill-:ngs in the 880. Opening events will be run off about 3 o'clock Thursday. The quadrangular meet is planned as a test for the high schools in the southern part of the county. The meet Ls a precede to the Utah Relays, the B. "Y. TJ. Invita tional, the district and state high school meets. W eekend Sports Review BASE.3ALL Hollywood took Clara. 11-4; St. Mary's defeated U. first place in the Pacific Coast ; c. L. A.. 11-10. and St. Mary's leagu.- at the end of the second i defeated. Santa Clara in a Sunday week of play, by sweeping a ser- doubleheader. 16-3 and 10-2. In the ies wan .san h mncisco. six games to one. Jack Doyle, New York betting commissioner, quoted the northwest Whitman took three games from Idaho. 6-2. 6-0. 5-2. San Diego regained the lead in New York Yankees at 7-10, and , the southern California conference the New York Giants at 8-5. to by defeating: Redlands twice in a win the American and the Nation- ' three-game series. Santa Barbara ... .ctKUf isto, respectively. 'State defeated Fresno State. 3-1. GOLF - George Von Elm. Los Angeles, won the annual California Califor-nia onen at Bakersfielri with n calitornia derby at Bay Meadows ! medal 5COre of 286, one stroke with Johnny Adams riding for (better than Willie Hunter. Los Owner William Boeing-. Seattle, i 4nirpi anM stn vori Qonta ' . -. - v 4 1 lull A . J , kj U A 1 L(L Monica. Frank Hixon. Pasadena, UTAH SHOOTERS SET NEW MARKS IN STATE SHOOT HORSE RACING Grim Reaper, Reap-er, a John Hay Whitney castoff. the mile and one-sixteenth won Adams scored four wins during the Saturday program. Tatterdemalion Tatterde-malion won the feature race at Tropical park, beating Gyral and was top amateur with 296. Ernie Combs, Long Beach, won the California Cali-fornia motor car dealers tourna- i l(, me wire: hun .gret ment at Del Monte, beating Ed .cored at the mile and seventy- Lowery. San Francisco, one and one-half ud. Frrk Strafaci.- yard route at Bowie with Moon ride second. Dale Hanover, owned by K. T. Gerry. New York, won 'hp Little Hambletonian. harness feature of the Aiken. S. C. fair .nd horse show. Peter Clark. vet- Brooklyn, won the north and south amateur at Pinehurst. N. C. University' of Washington's team defeated Oreeon State, 15-12. BH-murvn rui o l L11I1.TI.T1I.11I 17111(1 .1 I I f Will leran California race official, died i the National A. A. U. team cham pionship at Columbus, becoming at Lo Angeles. Bay Meadows handicappers assigned Seabiscuit 132 nounds for the S15.000 Bay Meadows handicap April 16. Utah county entered six out of the eleven teams competing in the state indoor gallery shoot, completed com-pleted Sunday, captured by the 38th infantry team of Fort Douglas, Doug-las, who set a new record of 1843 out of a possible 2000, J. W. Wood of Murray set a new individual record of 377. displacing displac-ing Sidney Boyle's mark of 376 established two years ago. The teams finished in the following fol-lowing order: Fort Douglas ..1943 Salt Lake Club 1840 Murray Rifles 1828 Payson Rifle Club . . . . 1794 Provo R. and R 1771 West High R. O. T. C. . .... .1770 Lehi Legion Post 1760 Dividend 1707 Park City 1687 Provo Legion (No. 1) 1670 Provo Legion (No. 2) 1511 Each contestant shot 40 shots, from four positions at 50 feet, standing, kneeling, siting, and prone. The ten high men were J. D. Wood. Murray, 377; Capt. B. O. Israel. Ft. Douglas. 374; Capt. A. S. Marr. Ft. Douglas. 373; J. A. Wade. S. L.. 372; Don Gordon. 371; Ray Hansen, Payson. 370; Glen Hogan, S. L.. 370: A. E. Den-ne. Den-ne. S. L.. 368; F. Siddoway. Murray. Mur-ray. 367; Sgt. A. Miller. Ft. Douglas, Doug-las, 367. High woman shooter, Mrs. -Pearl Hansen. 341. Individual scores of the Utah clubs were as follows: 38th Infantry-B. O. Ihsrael, 374; A. S. Marr. 373; A. Miller, 367: G. Cramer. 366; C Hargans. 363. Total 1843. Salt Lake Small Arms J. A. Wade. 372; Glen Hogan 370; A. E. Deune. 368; W. J. Patterson. 366; Arthur Gebhart. 364. Total 1840. Murray Rifle and Revolver Club --J. W. Wood. 377; Don Gordon, 371; F. Siddoway. 367; Bill Blood. 361: Ray Thomas. 352. Total 1828. Payson Rifle Club Ray Hansen. Han-sen. 370; W. Erlandsoii, 358; Louis Benard. 357: D. Fowler. 355; M. Narum, 354. Total 1794. Provo Rifle and Revolver Club Fred Loveless. 364; Tom Gess-ford, Gess-ford, 361: Cletus Anderson. 350; A. Groneman. 349; Cal Bee. 347. Total 1771. West High R. O. T. C Earl Nelson. 357; Lamont Nelson, 357: Bill Atkin. 353; LeRoy Drechel, 352; Jack Warner. 351. Total. 1770. in This Corner ... By Art Krenz WHITE WATER WONDER MINNESOTA COLLB&IAN AND WORLD CHAMPION LOG-ROLLER..., "W Mm Ul v ' lav v B. Y. U.-AGGIE TRACK MEET IS SET APRIL 23 CONNERS, KN& OF WE WHlfe WATERS, NEVER WORKED ON A LOG DRIVE, yet AT ESCANABA, MICtf., DEFEATED WLSUR MAfyC WHO hi AD HELD THE 7ITLZ FOR, Ten VARS... - ' Jack Stringham To Battle Montana Man Bowling Schedule Miller. 327. Total 1707. ( Park City O. Carpenter. 350; , D. Stoll, 341; C. Carpenter, 333; , B. Flanders. 332; R. Burns. 33 L. . Total 1687. . Provo American Legion Post, (No. 1) -- E. H. Smith, 351; P. . Peterson. 340; O. Stewart. 337; S . i MONDAY, APRIL 11 Belmont, 327; W. Jaussi. 315. To-j Provo City 8 P. M. tal 1670. i Pine Tree Service vs. Oscar Provo American Legion (No. 2) 'Carlson. -Frank Speckart. 331; A. I. Dan-, DeMolay vs. Holland Furnace, iels, 314; R. Greaves, 302; L. Pet-, Pryvo Herald vs. Birrell Bot-erson, Bot-erson, 288; Miss L. Newell. 276. tllng.' Total 1511. 10 p. m.. open alleys. M.iin rir.LU iX)uiewith IP's. Al Patnik. Ohio State .amperini. l. s. c. established two records as the Trojans defeated de-feated California, 74 to 56-4, at Berkeley. Zamperini ran the mile in 4 "minutes 13.7 seconds, and the half mile m 1 minute 53.2 seconds. George Anderson. California captain cap-tain wop. the low h'tro:lp" tvine- the meet record. Stanford, with Rav Malott running the 440 in 47.3 seconds, defeated U. C. L. A., 77-54. 77-54. Performances bv Woodie Strode. Tom Berkly aruLBill Lace-field. Lace-field. U. c. L. A. "negroes, made the meet closer than was expected. In other dual meets, the scores were. San Francisco State, 86, Santa Barbara State 45: Chico State 8S. Nevada 42: Fresno State 78. Sacramento State 53; Occidental Occiden-tal 86. San Diego States 45. Uni-versitv Uni-versitv of Portland won a quad-ranu'ar quad-ranu'ar meet with 67 points,. Linfield had 62. Williamette 15, Oreeon Normal 6. TENNIS Lehi American Lee-ion V T.ar- the first college team to take the i SOn. 362; G. Cedarstrom 354- W title. The Ohioans scored 41 . oco. T, ' iiuwiuuicii, od, rv. rnce, .sou; L). Woofinden. 34ii. Total. 1760. won the low and high board div- Dividend Rifle Club F. Fisher. ing. and Ralph Flanagan. Miami. ,354: A. Davis. 345 points. Michigan Was second V, OOA n ,1 CAA . f ! uir '4U uvv aiu Iree SLV1C I Hansen. 341: G. Davis. 340; swims to lead the scorers. One record was set. Princeton did the - - -- 300-yard medley relav in 3:54.3. j six-tenths of a second under the old mark. In a dual meet Stan- j Yrd Hefeated California. 55-20. RUGBY Cambridge University nded its American tour with a 39-0 win over an All-Ea9tern 15 at New York. SKIING Sig Ulland. national ehampion. won the class A jump-;ng jump-;ng in the Lake Tahoe invitational meet, with leaps cf 198 and 194 et. Olaf Ulland was second and Rov Mikklesen. California cham-oion. cham-oion. third. LEAGUE TO PONDER I ETHIOPIAN STATUS GENEVA. April 11 IM! Great I Britain today requested Joseph C. Avenol, secretary of the League I of Nations, to put the question of ; recognition of the Italianconquest ! Mrs. Pearl of Ethiopia on the agenda ''of the ! TUESDAY, APRIL 12 Industrial 8 P. M. City Recreation vs. Arden Dairy. Utah Power vs. Sewell's Stores. Provo Foundry vs. Calder's Tourist. 10 p. m.. open alleys. D. May council meeting. s Where the Big Ones LurL SWIMMING MFKT SET SALT LAKE CITY. April 11 l.".f Amateur swimmers of the Fred Perrv defeated j intermountain area today began Ellsworth Vines in a professional their final tune-ups for the 1938 tennis match at St. Louis. 4-6. i Annual A. A. IT. senior meet. which will be held Thursday and Friday nights in the Deseret gym pool. The 500-yard National A. A. U. junior free style race, scheduled 6-3. 6-3. Vines led for the tour. 29 matches to 24. U. C. L. A. defeated de-feated 'Stanford. 8-3. in a conference confer-ence match. POLO San Mateo qualified for Tupfdav's finals in the rw "w-nto 10-goaf tournament with an 8-4 j for Frida' niSht- win feature the win over the Crosswicks. meet. c OLLWrhJ BASEBALL In California intercollegiate leaeue ,,. c, .(-,. h When the Lusitania sank, 1198 nia. 6-3: U. S. C. defeated Santa ! persons lost their lives. HY vs. Salt Lake "ROUGH HOUSE" NELSON El Paso, Texas Orvil Hullinger vs. Bull Keener B. Y. U. Sa,t Lake One-hour time limit. Two out of three falls. OXING Jack Stringham vs. Jack Thompson B. Y. U. Montana Eight-round Main Bout Max Young Payson us. Eddie Baker Colored Sensation of Colorado Six Rounds TWO FAST PRELIMINARIES PAREC RO-SHE TUESDAY, April 12 8:30 Prompt Ringside $1.00 General Admission 55c - Kids 25c ... Ul I, I. ,,11.111 1I.UM.......IW MJ .....M.Mjp..U,ll. I M -I ILILK.mi fcniiflaiumMi Milium iiiiiiioiiniiiniiiitinniimii(iilniiiaMrtiiWOT"wf,J"lV niMr'miuiB.-MiiumM J WEDNESDAY. APRIL 13 Recreation 8 P. M. Senior Hotel vs. Traher Motor. Sinclair Oil vs. Texaco Oil. Western D St., vs. Yellow Cab. Thursday, open alleys. Recreation Doubles 10 P. M. M. Olscn-Prusse vs. Child-O. Olsen. C. Olsen-A. Olsen. vs. Lindahl-Burton. Lindahl-Burton. Snow-Williams vs. Corleissen -Weight. Friday, open alleys. This is the final week of league play. Teams winning second half play winners of f:rst half. Week of April 18. Prize money will be paid week of April 18. By mutual agreement between the coaching staffs, the Utah State-Brigham Young university track meet has been set back a week. The two teams will now meet in Logan on April 23. instead of next Saturday. Both Floyd Millet and Dick Romney, coaches of the two track squads, welcomed the change, for it will give them lime to get their spiked shoe men in better condi tion for this first meet oi uie season. sea-son. So far, training has been hampered by the weather, but with the advent of real spring, some great improvement in the teams is expected. First Meet Saturday The Aggies staged their annual inter-fraternity meet last Saturday, Satur-day, the same day as the Cougars were holding their, inter-class affair. af-fair. A comparison of times and distances of the two meets gives an idea of the comparative strength of he two squads at this time. The Cougar Frosh, who v;alked off with the local meet, will not be counted in the dope at this time. On the basis of what they did last week-end. the two schools would just about split the first places. The Cougars could be counted on to take the hurdles, the 440, 880, mile, two-mile, discus, hammer, and pole vault. From the looks of the marks set us. the Aggies have a slight edge in the remaining events. ' Paul McBeth. captain of the 'Y' team, is a cinch for the low hurdles hurd-les and should take the highs, providing pro-viding he doesn't fall. "Cob" Peters Pet-ers and Ben Taylor can handle all the Aggie quarter milers. and Bud Barber has a better mark in the half than the Logan team. Hughes Hanchett and Lawrence Golding are better distance men than the Aggies produced last week, with Hanchett looking -especially good. Field Men Improving In the field events, Les Cannon is tossing the discus about 125 feet consistently, and getting the hammer out over the 115 foot mark. Both are better than the A. C. marks. Carl Clark registered regis-tered 12 feet in the pole vault last tirne out, and is improving rapidly. He should be good for about 15 feet this spring. The red-headed Lee Cardon. sophomore sensation, is the big scorer on the Aggie team. This newcomer tallied 24 points in the meet Saturday, and his times were consistently good. He sprints, runs the hurdles, throws the jave lin, and broad jumps on the track squad officially, and high jumps well in a pinch. He must be given the advantage in the sprints and the broad jump, while his team-mates should win the high jump, the shot put and the javelin over the Cougars. Best Aggie marks in these events are six feet in the high jump. 40 feet in the shot, and 176 feet in the javelin all too good for the 'Y' varsity. With the meet two weeks off, it looks as if the second and third places will decide the winner, for j tne ursis are going to ne pretty well split up. Hollywood Takes Two From Seals 4 4 4 5 5 i 8 .600 .600 PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE W. L. Pet. Hollywood 7 3 .700 Seattle Los Angeles ....... Portland San Diego Sacramento San Franc'sco 3 Oakland 2 6 6 6 5 5 i Collegiate atmosphere will again invade Park Ro-She tomorrow night when two Cougars, a boxer and a wrestler, continue their professional pro-fessional battles. Orville Hullinger. two-time division di-vision grappling champion at 155 pounds, will meet Bull Keener in his second battle for money. He won from Floyd Hansen by the foul route a few weeks ago, but Hansen was definitely the better 500 500 300 200 BY UNITED PRESS Hollywood held first place in the Pacific Coast league today as a result of a double victory over San Francisco yesterday. The scores were -4 to 3 and 3 to 0. Three other Sunday double-headers double-headers were divided. Seattle defeated Oakland. 6 to 4, in the opener but lost. 1 to 0, in the second game. Kenny Shee-han Shee-han pitched the shutout, yielding 600 i wrestler. Hullinger and Keener will go one hour in a two out of three fall match. Another "Y"' hero. Jack String-ham, String-ham, will pull on the gloves for his second pro engagement. Jack Thompson of Montana will furnish the opposition. After Stringham's five-round kayoe of Max Young last week, the fans are anxious to see the red-headed puncher in action ac-tion again. Should he win from Thompson, the heat will be on for a match with Arcade Pierce. Two Wrestling Bouts In the other "wrassle" of the evening. Hy Sharman, the big. bad bully from Salt Lake, will go for to a 4 to 3 victory in the opening game of their doubleheader despite a home -run by Joe Orengo. Sacramento, Sac-ramento, aided by Bud Hafey's homer, won the second game. 4 to 3. Jim Chaplin hurled for San Diego as it won its opener from Los Angeles, 6 to 1. In the second sec-ond game. Los Angeles won 5 to 4, behind Lahti's pitching. No gamers were scheduled today. ".Y rs,,t rsf tV,- :.w . Whiter H;.leher pitched PortlandT7"u , 4 rwuSn- a ... q ' inr hbuse Nelson. The two have a little argument to settle that is th outgrowth of the team match last week. Sharman succeeded in making Roughhouse look" bad in this affair, and the Texan is anxious anx-ious for revenge. Max Young and Eddie Baker, or Kid Petty, whichever vou like, will go for six rounds in the semi-windup semi-windup boxing bcut. Petty pleased pleas-ed the fans last week in his go with Pearce. while Young is determined de-termined to make everyone forget hi- disastrous battle with Stringham. String-ham. Both men fight about the Triole Wins for (.same type of battle, and an inter Salt Lake Boysi-x,, w A booming triple by Frank Stewart in the last half of the ninth inning gave the Salt Lake Demolays first place in the state league and a 15-14 victory over the local team. Stewart tripled into in-to left field and then stole home with the winning run, while the Provo team was relaying the ball. Philip Tollman, loca' twirler. struck out twelve Salt Lakers during the seven inning:; he work- ed, while Stewart and R. Bean fanned eighteen Provo hatters between them. the evening's fun at 8:30. i 1 Phsh LAST TWO DAYS! HOWL AT HOLLYWOOD1 School Principals Meet At Santaquin PAYSON A meeting of the Nebo Distrist Principals' Study club was held Thursday night at Santaquin with Glenn Rowe as host principal, and President John Warner in charge. The speaker was Superintendent Owen L. Barnett, who gave a report re-port of the national convention held in Atlantic City. Dance numbers num-bers were given ty students; a saxaphone quartet, Peterson brothers, broth-ers, Lawrence Clayson and Basil Broadbent; vocal selections, Russell Rus-sell Peterson, accompanied; by Miss Peterson. Tennis Matches For Relay Meet Tennis matches are scheduled for all divisions entered in the invitational track and field meet and relay carnival at Brigham Young university, April 29 and 30, stated Coach Fred Dixon, director di-rector of the tennis tournament. Junior high school boys' teams will play Friday morning, followed fol-lowed by the senior high school boys' teams Friday afternoon. Senior Sen-ior high school finals are scheduled sched-uled for Saturday morning. . Senior high school girls', junior college, and Rocky Mountain conference con-ference freshmen teams will play their games Saturday. Cameraman caught this gorgeous picture in snapping Tom Led-"bettcr Led-"bettcr of Biltmore, tf. C, going where big trout lurk beneath a mountain waterfall in Buncombe county, N. C. I'JIftlUG SUPPLIES Everything You Need To WIRE YOUR HOME! 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