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Show J. f I 4 p . t' PRO VP ; (UT A tf) 8UND A.Y HERA I P,C sAf K DA Yt DBCEMBE R 11,. 1932 AGEFOUR 2QMB DRUBS Hornsby Out -For .Comeback CYPRUS BEATS 3 COUGARS ON THIS ALL-CONFERENCE TEAM 1 Devils Down Cavemen 25-12 J PfSKETBALt PROVO, 38-21 wildcat 1 .J - r ' -- jr KTfM;nslJ n ,l t Provo . high schoo bk ft 38-21 drubbing at the hands f a speedy Jordan high quintet idajr night, Steban and Laurit u'fDrurdtand reenter on the jetdlggerteam keeping the baa- t hot for the winners, Wilson' Street, Bulldog center, me out at the big . end of the bring horn for his team; Street ! I In the scoring department with ! pcints. The Jordan five led at ie half time, 22-11. JORDAN UV- ' O T lyce. rf 1 1 jnban, If 5 i uritzen. c 7 ismussen, rg 3 jtckstead, Ig 0 jtnoskovich, rf 0 hw, c . 1 ' idsen, c 0 1 1 5 2 2 0 0 & 6 F P 0 2 3 13 1 15 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 38 rotate 17 10 ; PROVO G T F P Tobson, rf 1 1 0 2 av. If 2 0 0 4 ,Ut'V . 3 7 3 9 mmell, rg 2 0 0 4 wan. lsr 0 0 0 0 Hiv rf 0 0 0 0 ivachevich, rf 10 0 rMils 9 Referee, Vincent. . ' 2 8 3 21 ig Chris, Jack Make West Team AN FRANCISCO, Dec. 10 (UE mk Christensen, fullback, and k, Johnson, tackle, of the Utah fiverslty football team, both of jtom were named On more than h - All-American selection, were li named to play on the West's a4 in the annual East-West tball game sponsored by the rlners Itere January 2. flM selections were uwuc ujr aehea Dana X. Bible of Nebras- Percy.Locey of Denver U., and a BabeH Holllngfcery of Wash-ton Wash-ton State. )thers players chosen are: :nds Steve Hokuff, Nebraska; k Caddy, S. F. U.; Ralph Stone, fF. -Olympic club; Don Colvin, Jnford. V tackles Elmer Morgan, Oregon; k Tozer, CaUf. :uards Atkeson, Kansas; Mar-i Mar-i Hodges, Olympic club; Clem In," Wash. State; Charles Moli-j Moli-j i, Santa Clara. Renters Ermory Reubel, St. rya and Lawrence Ely, Nebras- acks George Sander, ;' Wad, te; Harry Stafford, Texas; rel BrovellL St. Mary's Max luse, Gonzaga; Hank Schaldach, If, and Ernie Caddel, Stanford. Springville High I School Notes I he student officers of the ool together with Prin. E. E. jdsen enjoyed an interesting ! Tuesday to a number of high rols in the state. The purpose he trip was to visit schools and er wittf school officers on pro-ns pro-ns relating to school activities I , school ; government. In each ool- they -were enthusiastically ived and courteously treated, ! they received some valuable sestions on various school prone pro-ne none of them have the sys- V of student government that t In the Springville school, all V interested In ttfe system and ressed their belief to - its ef-iveness. ef-iveness. Many of the schools working toward a similar sys- and have : already established lent ; courts. Included in the rary were Lincoln High ool, Pleasant Grove High roU and South High School of j Lake City. The party xon-?d xon-?d of .Dick Wlghtman, ; mayor; elle Haymond, judge; Melba ::Ins,. secretary and . treasurer; on Whitney, chief of police; t Gladys Thompson, editor of Red and Blue. I ? w';' Si ) I zz- ,A - i Anxious to make a comeback in baseball with the St. Louis Car dinals the coming season, Rogers Hornsby, deposed as manager of the Chicago Cubs last year, and recently signed by the Cardinal management, is doing some early training. Above you see him taking tak-ing off a few excessive pounds tugging tug-ging at a pair of weights in a St. Louis gym. Forkers Beat PeeGee Again ie Faculty Fast Five basket-; basket-; team under the supervision of 'eh Paul Thorn badly defeated Senior' class t champions "loT s game tn the high school gym day,j afternoon. .The faculty are- quite, "puffed up" V over affair and are loudly vaunting 'score which was 36-10. ' Stars S the team were Mendenhall. m; Groesbeck, and McBeth. t SOPIIOMOBE VODIB . . ' i December the 16ttt as you all 1 know, the Sophomore Vodie nshow.;.Thls year Is different i all the rest, and that means H going to be the best. Each is staging its very-own' play ; the class; that wins will get ; of the -pay, . ,?,;' y bring your friends and netgh-j netgh-j too for Friday at 7:30 the .'jmore Vodie is due. .r-'v . Fannie Donaldson. (Contest was held, fa the Eng-( Eng-( tt9 Wednesday to' see . who ; d write the best story on "Vodie best was to appear In Spring ; Herald Thursday;: . This Is it. m RALPH'S RADIO SHOPr Prompt Rsdb Scrricc' PH0NB 1011-JI PLEASANT GROVE Spanish Fork drubbed the Pleasant Grove basketball team for the second time this, week in a game Friday evening on the Pleasant Grove court, the final score reading 31-21 for the Spaniards. In the contest between the reserves Pleasant Grove won 31-24. At Spanish Fork Tuesday night the Spaniards won 30-22 from the Gravers. Fullmer le dthe scoring for both teams with 17 points and Mrimhall at ceinted played some fast basketball. basket-ball. Gourley and Jenson stood out for. the Strawberries The -half ended 15-10 in favor of the Nebo team. Both fives had wretched luck with free throws. MAGNA Cyprus high school, apparently headed for the basketball basket-ball championship in the Jordan district, was too strong for the B. Y. high school quintet, Friday evening eve-ning and the northerners won out by a score of 56-38. . The Cyprus team led the Wildcats, Wild-cats, 17-11, at the end of the first quarter, the "Y" high boys crept up to make it 24-19 at the halftime, but at the end of the third quarter the ultimate winners had piled up a lead of 41-25. Cyprus' star center, Rigler, led the field in scoring with a total of 19 points, and was followed close'ly by the Wildcat's best point-getter, point-getter, Eastmond, who accounted for 17 of his team's total. The Cyprus Cy-prus guards also scored well. The score: CYPRUS G T F P Papanickolas, rf 4 6 0 8 Richardson, If 2 2 1 5 Rigler, lf-c 7 IJuck.worth, rg 3 Vaculin, ig 4 Sonne, c 1 Marsh, rg 2 Tomlin, lg 1 6 3 2 0 2 .0 5 19 0 6 1 9 0 2 1 5 0 2 8 56 Totals 24 21 B. Y. U. HIGH G T F P Eastmond, rf 6 6 5 17 Holt, If 2 Jacobs, c 2 Candland, rg 0 Oldroyd, lg 1 Pardoe, If 0 Swenson, If 0 Bayliss, rg 0 3 3 2 2 0 3 1 2 1 1 1 0 3 1 Totals 11 20 14 36 Referee, McDonald; umpire, Nel son. Cellhouse Squad Now In Higher Gridiron League JOI.IKT, 111- Dec 9 (U.RV-Foot ball stepped out of the Intramural class today into the "big time-when time-when the Institution's first game with sm outside team was sched uled for Dec 26. Opponents of the all-star State- ville eleven will be a team from Cabery, a small Illinois v village. players of the cellhouse E team which won the prison's intra-cell-house competition. Marty Durkin, a well-known Chi cago murderer, will play tackle on the Stateville line. He was one of the stars of the cellhouse E team. Convict Tawsech, a former Oak high school athlete. Is expected to shine in the prison backfleld. il - V -, x- I 7 m vranesv:;7 fcsv iMfc ill o-- -x-x 1 1, w ii r i ini.iTM--ii-f- --'Sm M jLat-. ,..,..... .. - ii-,i:i.mi,.w. m! '"" V ' "L tw"l'M..- &?$8rJ ijnWfiiw-'a-'""'"i"''"',""ii ii - 1:; 3? sijiSS y j""inj nt inl1 ln -v T1A:,if'i ,'' Sports writers on NEA Service newspapers in the Rocky Mountain conference area collaborated in selecting select-ing this team, whose members include five Utah men, two Utah Aggies, three from Brigham Young and one from Colorado College. RETAINS TITLE NEW YORK, Dec. 10 ILE Kid Chocolate, ebony-skinned Cuban, was still recognized today as featherweight feath-erweight boxing titleholder by the New York State Athletic commission' commis-sion' because a champion gets the benefit of the doubt when fighting is close. Last night- at Madison Square Garden before: 15,000 spectators, Chocolate received a fifteen round decision over the challenger, Fidel LaBarba of California. The bout was so close that many 'thought it should have been a draw. MAN IS BUILDING DREAM SHIP FOR LAZY CRUISE INTO SOUTH v 19 Lions Tested In Hoop Contest PA YSON Coach Stan Wilson of the Payson Lions tested 19 basket ball men in a game with Murray Friday night which was won by the Smelterites 28-22. The Lions, led by a 16-7 score at .the half, came back strong in the second period to bring the score closer. Strom, speedy center of the Lion outfit, was high point man of the contest with 10 counters and Erek son, Murray left forward, led his teammates with 9. COLLECTIONS LAG BEHIND HERE (Continued from Page One) department fees division) fines and forfeitures $296, $222; accounts receivable $405, 60 cents; street lighting No. l-A-2,029, $1,908; sundry revenue nothing, $93; municipal mu-nicipal golf course $5, $16; dog tax . collections $13, nothing; net general collections $28,887, $34,791. The total expenditures for the various , departments in the city thus far come to $137,425, leaving a balance of $45,303 of unexpended unexpend-ed : appropriations, the report shOWS.;;'; No collections were made in the month of November In the perpetual per-petual cemetery account which stands at $3,071. . , Short Shots At Sports Spots Montgomery Captain Ullir Montgomery, smart quar terback cf the Columbia football squad this year, has been elected captain of the 1933 team. Expensive Horseflesh Admiral Grayson received $55,-000 $55,-000 for the Man o' War f my, War Feathers. Hell Be Up Soon Roy Hoke, tackle for Mohall, N. D., high school, weighs 268 pounds and has to bave his football uniform uni-form and shoes made to order. Nearly Two' Teams Leave The University tf Pennsylvania loses 17 members of Its 1932 football foot-ball squad this year due to graduation. tut Jrue-thM motorist's wives know what their husbands . . think of "thumbing neighbors. - 1 This Is one of a series of sdrertbements paid tot bf your . ocai irvoipuniuoa company. x m purpose is a uicvur& motoritts from giviog lifts to Hhumber,' or beggsrs of free rides. This practise is dangerous to motorists and costly to ; trsasporutioa comptnies; rj.. v. -, ' By STANLEY BAILEY C ALPINE, Calif., Nov. 28 In this little mountain town, where the brown desert rolls away to the east and the green of the Sierra climbs up to the west, a former Grays Harbor, Wash., lumberman is dreaming of the South Seas and is building a boat for fulfillment of those dreams. He is Frank Blagen, manager for the Davfes-Johnson Lumber Co., of Hoquiam, Wash., in Calpine. With his wife and three children, Blagen plans to set sail in a boat he is now making at the lumber mill and cruise along the Pacific coast and then turn the nose of the craft, toward that land of visions. vis-ions. Since he was a youngster, Blagen has owned a boat of some sort, and he still yearns to feel 'the roll of waves beneath his feet. Blagen's father was a carpenter, and the son is building the boat with' his own hands in his spare moments. Actual construction was started last May. The boat, he plans, will be completed com-pleted next fall. It is to be an auxiliary ketch, having two masts with sails and, a 56-horsepower gasoline engine. It is 46 feet long by 12 feet beam and a six-feet draft. It has a lead keel of five and one-half tons. The interior is being fitted with six berths, galley with gas and automatic auto-matic refrigeration, electric plant and built-in fixtures. Altho the lumberjack - skipper will rely largely on winds, the craft will carry sufficient fuel for a cruise of 1000 miles. Specially veneered wood is being used in the interior finish, and teakwood costing $350 per thou sand feet is being used for rail lngs. Because a rise is indicated in tobacco prices, Cuba plans to increase in-crease its tobacco acreage. AMERICAN FORK Spring-ville's Spring-ville's Red Devils turned in a 25-12 win over American Fork Friday night, leading the Cavemen all the way through and bringing their margin to 13-3 at the half. Livingston, sub forward on Coach Simba Thorn's team, came through with one of the best performances per-formances of the evening, and Durrant, who starred on the gridiron grid-iron for American Fork, starred with a remarkable floor game for the Alpine division team. SPRINGVILLE - G T F P Senior, rf 2 0 0 4 Money, ir 0 2 0 0 B. Wilkins, c .2 1 0 4 Cherrington, rg o 1 1 1 Rowland, lg i i o 2 Clark, rf 3 0 0 6 Jensen, If o 0 0 0 N. Strong, If 0 0 0 0 Palfrey man, If o 0 0 0 Bird, c 0 0 0 0 Sumsion, c 0 0 0 0 J. Wilkins. c 0 0 0 ft Livingston, rf 4 0 0 8 Totals 12 5 1 25 AMERICAN FORK G T F P Burgess, rf 3 0 0 6 Norton, if o 1 0 0 Hunter, c l 2 2 4 Durrant, rg 0 0 0 0 Parker, le o o o n Bowen, if o 0 0 0 Kirkpatrick, If 0 0 0 0 Holman, c 1 2 0 2 Totals Referee, Van L. Johnston. 5 5 2 12 Leuven; umpirte, Wasatch Quintet Licks Lehi 45-36 HEBER Coach Frosty Rich ard's Wasatch high school basket ball five won its fourth successive victory Friday when it handed a 45-36 defeat to the Lehi high Pelicans. Earl Giles, center for the Heoer team and pride of the Wasatch, led the way in scoriner with 14 points, and was ably abetted by hs teammates. Allred, forward, ard Evans, center, played fast ball for the Pelicans, particularly in tha last half, but were unable to stem the drive of the championship-headed championship-headed Wasps. The Wasatch reserves downed the Lehi seconds, 21-12, in the pre liminary. With toys more realistic than ever, we. needn't be surprised if Junior crows . more skentirai rf the way Santa's whiskers fit wmmm tiwm - i Q. yS ir WL PULL fjf Trie BALL J into BY NAT HOLMAN Star Player, Coach and Author of "Winning Basketball" QUESTION: Some players shoot at the basket with a great deal of spin on th? ball'; others throw what we call a "floater. Which do you recommend? ANSWER: I have always advocated ad-vocated the spin shot. My opinion is based upon many years of experimentation, ex-perimentation, and observation of both types. In that time I have found that the average player has more control con-trol over the ball and shoots with1 greater accuracy when spin is employed. em-ployed. A decided Improvement will not be noted immediately after changing over to the use of the spin shot; accuracy comes only with practice. Northwest Group Endorsing Dern SALT LAKE CITY, Dec. 10 UJ Endorsement of Governor George H. Dern's candidacy for secretary of the interior in the forthcoming administration, was virtually promised prom-ised today in a telegram to the governor gov-ernor from officers of the Northwest North-west Mining association. The wire invited the governor to attend the association's thirty-eighth thirty-eighth annual convention in Spokane, Spo-kane, Wash., and added: "Your attendance is further desired de-sired as we propose to indorse you as secretary of the interior, if acceptable ac-ceptable to you." Town criers still bear the name in England. William Green recently recent-ly completed his 60th year as town crier at Bingley, Eng. 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