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Show PROVO (UTAH) SUNDAY HERALD, SUNDAY, APRIL 25, 1937 NEW RECORDS ESTAMJES Y. e. -RELAY- AGE TWO Junior High Bos Compete in Two Divisions Here Two new records were established estab-lished and another tied in Friday's track and field events of the 27th B. Y. JJ. Relay Carnival. Several more existing standards were approached ap-proached but not equalled as girls of junior and senior high schools and boys of junior high schools performed throughout the cold, windy afternoon. Miss Lola Beddington of Tintic junior high set up a new mark in the baseball distance throw, tossing the ball 178 feet. The former for-mer record, set in 1936 by Miss Muhlestein of Lincoln, was 162 feet. Equals Dash Mark . A new record was set in the senior high girls' baseball distance dis-tance throw also. Miss Rifth Tomlinson of Ogden registered a throw of 213 feet 10 inches, bettering bet-tering by almost 18 feet the former for-mer record held by Miss Tolar of Rock Springs, Wyo. The nearest approach to shattering shat-tering a third record came when Miss Lenora Weight of Springville ran the 50-yard dash- in :06.4, equalling the existing mark. Not since 1929 has this race been run in that time. Miss Stanfield of Murray setting up the present record re-cord in that year. Miss Leila Davis of McCammon, Ida., won the senior high broad jump as expected, but her distance of 15 feet 8 inches was almost a foot below the record she set in 936. The 440-yard relay was a feature of the afternoon, with Lehi's speedy team driving to the tape barely ahead of McCammon. The system of dividing the junior ju-nior high boys into two divisions according to age, weight, and height proved very satisfactory. Naturally betters marks were made in Division 1 in which the larger boys participated, but the smaller group, also showed up well. Bob Marshall of the B. Y. junior ju-nior high was the only individual winning two firsts. He captured the century and broad jump events in the Division 2. Granite junior high, coached by Lyndon Dudley, former "Y" athlete, won firsts irt-botrr the 440 and 80 relays. Sherman Coleman of Farrer won the shotput, Max Edwards of Lincoln annexed the 440 and Jean Nielson of Pleasant "Grove won the pole vault, making practically a clean sweep of, the Division 2 events for Utah county boys. The only Utah county boy to win a first in Division 1 competition compe-tition was David Boshard of Farrer, Far-rer, who won Race 2 of the 440-yard 440-yard dash. DIVORCE GRANTED Electa Joseph was granted a divorce from Joe Joseph in district dis-trict court Saturday. Alimony of $15 monthly was allowed by the court. She charged cruelty. Junior High Girls 50-yard dash Lenora Weight, Springville; Arlene Oottrell, Draper; Dra-per; Shanna Nelson, Tropic; Mar-val Mar-val Moulton, Heber; Shirl Perkins, Per-kins, B. Y. junior high. Time, :06.4. (Ties record). Baseball distance throw Lola Beddingfield, Tintic; June Barnes, Farrer; Marie Stone, Springville; Esther Hutchings, Lehi; Norma Gustin, Springville. Distance, 178 feet. (New record). High jump- Betty Jean Docton, Lehi; Norma Gustin, Springville; Phillis Boyer, Springville; Nola Johnson, Lincoln. Height, 4 feet 4 inches. Broad jump Ellen Bone, Lincoln; Lin-coln; Ruth Ord, Juab; Shirley Chatterly, Kanab; Shirley Perkins, B. Y. junior high; Westbrook, Draper. Distance, 14 feet 2 in. 440-yard relay Springville; Lincoln; Draper; Lehi; Wasatch. Time. :59.7. Senior High Girls Baseball distance throw Ruth Tomlinson, Ogden; Carolyn Albert, Al-bert, Carbon; Lucille Whiting, Wasatch; Wa-satch; Margorie Babcock, Carbon; Myrtle Jackson, Lehi. Distance, 213 feet 10 inches. (New Record). 60-yard dash Vilate Lindsay, wasatch; Margurite Jones, McCammon, Mc-Cammon, Ida.; Cleo Whiting, Springville; Leila Davis, McCammon; McCam-mon; Rosemary . Mrak, Rock Springs, Wyo. Time,.:07,6. High jump Many Begovich, Rock Springs; Ora Land, Tintic; Leila Davis, McCammon; Grace Johnson, Lincoln; Dixie Pace, Wasatch Academy. Height, 4 feet 6 '-2 inches. Broad jump Leila Davis McCammon; Mc-Cammon; Mary Begovich, Rock Springs; Rosemary Mrak, Rock Springs; Wanda Turner, Lehi; Mabel McBeth, Carbon, and Mar-ieta Mar-ieta Bowman, McCammon, tied for fifth. Distance, 15 feet 8 inches. 440-yard relay--Lehi; McCammon; McCam-mon; Lincoln; Spanish Fork; Carbon. Time, :o6..r. Indiana Miters Set World Mark FRANKLIN FIELD, PHILADELPHIA, PHILA-DELPHIA, April 24 IM A fleet quartet of Hoosier milers set a new world record today in winning win-ning the four mile relay championship cham-pionship for University of Indiana at the 43rd Annual Penn Relay Carnival. The Hoosier team of Malcolm Truitt, Jimmy Smit'n. Tommy Dec karri and Don Lash, covered the four miles in 17 minutes 16 and one tenth second, cracking the old record by 5 and four-tenths seconds. The New York Gazette was the first newspaper to be published in New York state. It was founded found-ed in 1725. Junior High Boys DIVISION II Shotput Sherman Coleman, Farre rof Provo; Melvin Dal by Beaver: Junior Preeca. Farrer: D. ! Baum, Dixon; Emerson McCarthy, Garfield. Distance, 33 feet J. in. 100-yard dash Bob Marshall, B. Y. junior high; Bill Ellison, American Fork; Linel Miner, Hinckley; Clair Bardsley, Gunnison; Gunni-son; David Sudweeks, B. Y. junior ju-nior high. Time, :12.1. ' 440-yard dash Max Edwards, Lincoln; Forest Loader, Pleasant Grove; Piatt Watts, Springville; Bob Sears, Farrer; Fred Adams, Lehi. Time, 1:6.4. Broad jump Robert Marshall, B. Y. junior high; Melvin Daloy Beaver; Bill Tohill, Granite; Linel Miner, Hinckley; Cleve Barnum, Virgin Valley. Distance, 17 feet 3V2 inches. Pole vault Jean Nielson, Pleasant Pleas-ant Grove; Clair Bardsley, Gunnison; Gunni-son; Miles Harris, Pleasant Grove; E. Holmstead, American Fork; M. Simmons, Dixon of Provo. Height 8 feet 8 inches. 220-yard dash Linel Miner, Hinckley ; Warren Bradshaw, Lehi; Bill Ellison, American Fork; Merlyn Jones, Tooele; Gene Marshall, Mar-shall, Dixon. Time, :28. High jump Ray Naylor, West Jordan; Nolan Brown, Lincoln; Dan Clark, Dixon; Dalby, Beaver; Beav-er; Simmons, Dixon. Height, 5 feet 1 inch. 440-yard relay Granite (Tohill, (To-hill, Poulton. Greaves, Bertoft); B. Y. junior high; Dixon; Lincoln; American Fork. Time, :54.4. 880-yard relay Granite (Greaves, (Grea-ves, Poulton, Bertoft, Tohill); Farrer; Dixon. Time, 1:52.2. Girls Break Two Records In Baseball Throw; Marshall, "Y" High Wins 100 and Broad Jump TO THE VICTORS, ETC. VALLEY FLOUR & FEED CO. Successors to City Feed Store WHITE FAWN FLOUR LEADS THEM ALL White Eagle Floiir, Cash Valley Famous, Golden West Electric Light, and Ked Kose b lours (featuring Max-field's Max-field's Golden M. Silver M. Dairy and Poultry Feeds). DEALERS TN HAY AND GRAIN 151 North Univ. Ave. Phone 114 J. S. Smith & Sons, Props. DIVISION I Pole vault Billy Hansen, North Sanpete; Don Chipp, Rock Springs, Wyo.: Don Strassburg, American Ameri-can Fork; Bob Perschon, Madison; Madi-son; Ted Rynearson, Granite. Height, 10 feet. 220-yard dash -Victor Mitchell, West Jordan; Earl Schofield, Cyprus; Cy-prus; Jack Canning, Midvale; Arthur Ar-thur Spendlove, Hinckley; Hansen, Han-sen, Ephraim. Time, :25.7. Shotput Brady Walker, Virgin Valley, Nev.; Ted Angus, Dixon, Provo; Garth Boyce, Rock Springs, Wyo.; M. Halliday, Dixon; Melburn Jenson, Virgin Valley. i Distance, 46 feet 4 incnes. 100-yard dash Gordon Riae-out, Riae-out, Draper; Fred Mortenson, Ephraim; Henry McTague, American Ameri-can Fork; Jack Park, Granite; Earl Schoenfeld, Cyprus. Time, :11.1. 440-yard dash (Race I) Chester Olson, South Emery; Dar-rel Dar-rel Payne, Draper; Kenneth Blake, Virgin Valley; Earl Fox, Lehi; Glen Gardner, Farrer of Provo. Time, :58.6. 440-yard dash (Race II) David Boshard, Farrer; Franklin Turpin, West Jordan; Ned Walker, Uintah: Bob Sjoblon, Draper; Alva Al-va Goodall, American Fork. Time, :59.9. Broad jump Hubert Sorenson, Draper; Sylvan Johnson, Kanab; Jack Canning, Midvale; Homer Christensen, Midvale; Keith Trane, Lhi. Distance, 18 feet. High jump Leston, Tooele; M. Singleton, Dixon; Cosslett, Cedar City; Johnson, Kanab; Spendlove. Spend-love. Hinckley. Height, 5 feet 5 inches. 440-yard relay Draper (Sjob-lom, (Sjob-lom, Payne, Sorenson, Rideout); Granite; American Fork; Lehi; Midvale. Time, :48.4. 880-yard relay Ephraim (Mortenson, (Mor-tenson, Hanson, Chiney, Allred); Lincoln; Cyprus; Dixon; Virgin Valley. Time, 1:46. I National League M4 "One of the Most Remarkable Records in the Annals of Automobile Insurance Business" A Consistent Record of Progress 192$. 1929. 1830- 1931 1933 1933 . 1934 1935 Assets t 170.668 492.620 841. MS 931.594 1.08S.833 1,371.470 1,687.053 2.193,498 1958 2,919,216 'e Net Net rrert. Total Tote! Surplus Premiums Written lacom Dlsb'sm'ta S 54.331 $ 43.334 S 170.991 1 222.721 $ 66.730 102.291 203.330 742.440 749.328 413.851 118.416 404 630 1.065.103 1.098.971 864.623 159.129 417.734 1,277.539 1.311.773 1.138.44)3 221.753 478.207 1.329.753 1,371.745 1.206,791 301.274 50.458 1.586.908 1.639.782 1,369.482 357.051 719.292 2.138.566 2.211.99 1.919.520 451,176 870.959 3.043.029 3.103.653 2.587.629 652,226 1,090,696 3,989,653 3,995,591 8,207344 OVER 150,000 POLICYHOLDERS Rated "A" By Alfred M. Best National Insurance Authority INVESTIGATE and SAVE New Emblems Available to All Policyholders Clarence P. Greer District Manager Conn Bank Bldg. Standing of the Teams W. L. Pet. Pittsburgh 3 0 1.000 St. Louis 3 0 1.0OU New York 2 0 1.000 Philadelphia 2 1 .667 Brooklyn 1 1 500 Cincinnati 0 3 .000 Boston 0 3 .000 Chicago 0 3 .000 Friday's Results New York 3, Boston 0. St. Louis 5, Chicago 4. Brooklyn 4, Philadelphia 3. Pittsburgh 4, Cincinnati 3. American League Standing of the Teams W. L. Pet. Detroit 2 0 1.000 Boston 1 0 1.000 Philadelphia 2 1 .667 Cleveland 1 1 .500 Chicago 1 2 .333 St. Louis 1 2 .333 New York 0 1 .000 Friday's Results Cleveland 9, St. Louis 2. Philadelphia 7, Washington 1. Detroit 10, Chicago 2. New York at Boston, postponed rain. FIVE FORFEIT BAIL Five forfeited bond for small traffic offenses In city court Saturday: Fern Crandall, failure to observe stop sign, $5; V. E Hedqulst, overtime parking, $2; Donald Talboe, double parking, $2; Ed Mangum, overtime parking, park-ing, $2: Charles C. Wilson, failure fail-ure to observe stop sign, $5. . r 1 Beaming as brightly as the shining Stanley Cup" between them, James Norris, Jr., left, son of the owner ol the Detroit club, and Herbie Lewis, star lelt wing, grin Joyously and triumphantly at each other across hockey's greatest prize which the Red Wings won by defeating the New York Rangers. ( - Ogden and Helper Win Girls1 Tennis BRYANT BOYS WIN IN TENNIS Ogden high's entry in the singles and Helper's entry in the doubles tourney emerged victorious vic-torious in Friday Invitational tennis ten-nis play for girls. Delpha Hales, of Ogden, defeated de-feated Afton Gibson, of Nephi 6-3, 6-3, to annex the honors in the girls' singles. One of the best irl tennis players seen in Provo for some time Miss Hales displayed an accurate serve and a clever backhand to win out over her Nephi opponent. Donna Lou Wardell and Donna Mae Milier, of Helper, took the final match from B. Y. high's Mary Taylor and Shirley Crumb, 6-4, 6-2. Following are the results of each round: Singles: first round Dorothy Evans, Tooele, defeated Pauline Worlton, Lehi, 6-1, 6-3; Delpha Hales, Ogden, defeated Grace. Johnson, Lincoln, 6-0, 6-2; Janet Lamph, Carbon: Afton Gibson. Nephi; Delia Williams, Grants-ville; Grants-ville; Elaine Nielson, Springville; Betty Young. Rock Springs, Wyo; and Patsy -Hone, Wasatch Academy, Acade-my, byes. Second round Afton Gibson defeated Janet Lamph. 6-4. 6-4; Delia Williams, defeated Elaine Nielson. 6-"2. 6-1; Dorothy Evans defeated Betty Young. 6-0. 6-3; Delpha Hales defeated Patsy Hone. 6-3, 6-0. Semi-finaLs Afton Gibson Gib-son defeated Delia Williams, 6-1. 6-1; Delpha Hales defeated Dorothy Doro-thy Evans. 6-3. 6-1. Finals -Delpha Hales, Ogden, defeated Afton Gibson Nephi, 6-3, 6-3. Doubles: first round Janet Nielson-Martha Williams, Carbon, defeated Elsie Calton-Eliza Calton,' Lehi, 6-0, 6-1; Mary Taylor-Shirley Crumbo, B. Y. high, defeated Rose Rinaldi-PhyllLs Long, Tooele, 6-0, 6-2; Francis Case-Mar jorie Crocker, Duchesne, defeated Wanda Wan-da Moyal-Owena Young. Wasatch Academy, 6-2, 6-1; Norman Stev-enson-Genevieve Gibson. Nephi, defeated Annie Rohbork-Hplen Rohbock, Lincoln, 6-0, 6-4; Marion Garner-Marion Fletcher, Ogden, aeieatea uorotny Young-Maurice jerrnes, urantsville, 6-4, 6-4; Don na Lou Wardell-Donna Mae Mill er. Helper, defeated Darla Dav- Beth Lee, Millard, 6-1, 6-1; La- June Whitnev-PrLscilla Gudmund-sen, Gudmund-sen, Springville, bye. Second round -- B. Y. hie-h de feated Carbon, 6-2, 6-4; Duchesne defeated Nephi, 6-6, 1-6, 7-5; Ogden Og-den defeated Pleasant Grove, de fault; Helper defeated Springville, Spring-ville, 6-0. 6-1. Semi-finaLs Helper defeated Ogden, 6-4, 6-3; B. Y. high defeated de-feated Duchesne, 6-1, 6-2. Finals Helper defeated B Y high, 6-4, 6-2. TO FIGHT STEELE SEATTLE. April 23 tt'.P) Frank Battaglia, Canadian-Italian from. Minneapolis, will face world's middleweight champion Freddie Steele, Tacoma, Wash., here May 11 for his title. Promoter Nate Druxman said today. Druxman was forced to line up a new foe for the champion after Ken Overlin, Washington, D. C, challenger, who arrived here last week to start training for his title shot against Steele, May 4, suddenly became ill. Bryant junior high school of Salt Lake took both the singles and doubles to walk off with the honors in the Invitational tennis tournament for junior high school boys. Allen Hardy, red-headed ace, defeated Evan Crandall, of Tooele, 6-2, 6-0, in the final match of the boys' singles. Dick Dorton and John Mehner. Bryant's entry en-try in the doubles,, defeated Newell New-ell Aldous and Jack Adams, 6-2, 6-1, to take the final match. The finals in both events were between be-tween Bryant and Tooele. A freezing wind and occasional flurries of snow did not prevent the largest number of participants in the history of the event from showing up, according to Director Fred Dixon. Results were as follows : Singles: first round Allen Hardy, Bryant, defeated L. Jones, Pleasant Grove, 6-0, 6-1; Harold Olpin, Nephi, defeated Aaron Leigh. Cellar City, 6-0, 6-4; Ralph Ashton, Wasatch, defeated Robert Huish, Farrer. 6-1, 6-3; James Sprowell. Rock Springs, defeated A. Chipman. Lehi, 12-10, 3-6, 7-5; Evan Crandall, Tooele, defeated Ted Taylor, IS. Y. high, 6-2, 6-3; Don Rowley. Lincoln, bye; Bill Lambson. Dixon, bye; John Curry. Cur-ry. Bingham, defeated Kay Roth-wall. Roth-wall. Springville, 7-5, 3-6. 6-3. Second round Hardy defeated Olpin, 6-4. 6-1; Ashton defeated Sprowell. 6-0, 6-0; Crandall defeated de-feated Rowley, 6-3, 6-2; Curry defeated Iambson, 6-2. 6-2. SemifinalsHardy Semi-finalsHardy defeated Ashton, 6-4, 6-1; Crandall defeated Curry, 6-3, 6-2. Finals - Hardy defeated Crandall, 6-2, 6-0. Doubles: first round Bob In-score-Garth Belliston, Nephi; Grant Bidderman-Jack Anderson, Cedar; Dick Dorton-John Mehner, Bryant; Newell Aldous-Jack Adams, Ad-ams, Tooele, byes; Earl Batenson-Grant Batenson-Grant Cullimore, Bear River, defeated de-feated Gene Fox-Sterling Bench, Dixon. 4-6, 6-1, 6-3; Dick Sparks-Don Sparks-Don Christensen, Farrer, defeated Merrill Taylor-Don-Rowley, Lincoln, Lin-coln, 6-1. 6-1; Don George-John Conley, Pleasant Grove, defeated Mac Woolf-Bud Harmon, B. Y. high, 6-2, 2-6, 6-2; Floyd Ander- son-Hollis Hutchings, Springville, defeated Dee Evans-Grant Ash, Lehi, 6-2, 9-11. 6-4. Second round Nephi defeated Cedar, 6-2, 6-1; Bryant defeated Bear River, 6-2, 6-2; Farrer defeated de-feated Pleasant Grove, 2-6, 6-2, 6-2; Tooele defeated Springville, 6-2. 6-2. Semi-finals Tooele defeated Farrer, 6-2, 6-3; Bryant defeated Nephi, 6-3, 6-2. Finals Bryant defeated Tooele, 6-2, 6-1. FAST BOXING BOUTS SLATED Max YOung, handsome Paysbn boxer who only recently held Arcade Ar-cade (Windmill) Pierce to an eight-round ' draw, will get a chance to- exhibit his wares against out-of-atate competition at the Park Ro-She arena Monday Mon-day night. His opponent will be Jimmy Walcott, the slugging middleweight mid-dleweight from Phoenix, Arizona. The bout is billed for 6 rounds, which has proved to be Young's best length for fights. Against Pierce he was going strong at the end of six rounds but weakened miserably in the seventh and eighth. Against Walt Holbrook of Ogden he fought a brilliant aix-round aix-round bout. When he met Jackie Burke, holder of the intermoun-tain intermoun-tain welterweight title, he held his own for about five rounds before weakening under the champ's two-fisted barrage. Promoter Henry Jones has promised the winner of the Young-Walcott affray a crack at Arcade Pierce. Young thinks he can whip the Windmill fighter now. He figures he has a defense worked up for Arcade's deadly punches, and an offensive made to order for the Springville battler's loose guard. Walcott is an experienced boxer, box-er, and claims to have beaten many of the upper layer of inter-mountain inter-mountain states. The Lou Petro-Tony Lopez six-rounder six-rounder may rival the main event for thrills and excitement. Petro regards the Lopez fight as an opportunity to gain prestige in the boxing game. He is gradually climbing the fistic ladder among lightweights. Preliminaries will feature two Lincoln high school boys. Dee Elder Eld-er and Ralph Dickey. Elder will meet Morris Taylor of Salem, while Dickey will face Jack Warner War-ner of Nevada. Both are four-rourtd four-rourtd bouts. Baseball Scores AMERICAN LEAGUE R H E Philadelphia 6 8 2 Washington 4 7 0 Williams and Brucker; New-som New-som and Hogan. New York 6 9 0 Boston 511 1 Pearson and Dickey; Grove and R. Ferrell. St. Louis 4 6 1 Cleveland 3 8 1 Walkup and Hemsley; Feller and Pytlak. Detroit at Chicago Postponed, rain. West High Team Hoses Oat Provo In Doubles Final Frank Mhner, East high school ace. beat down some strong competition com-petition to win out in the senior high school boys' singles tourney At the B.Y.U. invitational Saturday Sat-urday afternoon. Mehner, a sophomore, sopho-more, was winner last year in the junior high school singles at the meet. He beat out steady playing Cliff Berg of South high In the final game, 6-4, 6-4. Mehner entered the finals by virtue of victories over Jim Palmer Pal-mer of Grantsville, 6-1, 6-2, in the quarter-finals and Provo's Merlin Slack, 6-2, 6-2, in the semifinals. semi-finals. Berg defeated Ray Du Bois of Westminster, 6-1, 6-4, in the quarter finals, and Harmon of B. Y. high, 6-2. 6-1. to earn a place in the finals. Other quarter-finalists quarter-finalists in the event were Glen Olalsen of Logan, who lost to Slack, and Jim Eakins, of West high, whom Harmon defeated to go into the semi-finals. In the senior high boys' doubles, doub-les, Bill Maneum and Bud Eg- gertson of Provo high dropped the most thrilling match of the tournament to Grover Rawlings and Vernie Swensen, of West high, 6-3, 8-6, 6-3. After dropping drop-ping the first set, the Provo boys rallied to take the next set and battle on even terms with the Salt Lake pair to 3-all in the last set, when they dropped three close ones to lose the set and match. In earning a finals berth, Eg-gertson Eg-gertson and Mangum defeated William Murdock and Leon Hoi-man Hoi-man of Wasatch, 6-1, 8-6, in the quarter-finals, and Evan Bauche and Seth Mangum, South Cache, 6-1, 6-3, in the semi-finals. The champion West high team defeated de-feated Hayden Reese and Jame Porter, East high, 6-2, 5-7, 6-3. in the semi-finals, after trimming Thomas Crandall and Leo Rupp, of Tooele, 6-2, 6-3, in the quarter-finals. Others who survived to the quarter-finals were Harold Lambe and Bruce Allen of Cyprus, Cyp-rus, and Lynn Rockwood and Bill Spere, of South high. TIMPS TO PLAY DIVIDEND TODAY Looking like a common folding fan. the dagger fan is really a sheath containing a short, sharp stiletto. The deceptive weapon was invented by the Japanese. Kansas still yields numerous fossils of sea creatures, which proves that the state once was under water. The Provo Timps, local state Industrial league team, will play at Dividend today in the opening exhibition game of the season. Manager Lefty Cole will take 18 players on the bus. leaving the fire station at 11:30 this morning. morn-ing. Lefty will probably give all the players a chance to play a few innings in the game with the Dividend team, one of the strongest strong-est semi-professional outfits in the state. The squad to make the trip to Dividend is as follows: Lefty Cole, Ronnie Peacock, Sammie Christensen. Chris-tensen. and Brown, pitchers; Man-son Man-son Glen Page, and Walt Skinner, Skin-ner, first base: Banting, Bliss Hoover, second base; Joe Paurr, shortstop; Lob Collins, third base; Alva Jensen, Frank Dudley, Jack Smith and Red Roberts, outfielders; outfield-ers; Deb Dudley, John Smith, Overly, catchers. The Timps will open the league season here on Sunday, May 9, against the Gemmell club of Bingham. Old Cannon Ball f Revives Memories of Indian Fights Could It talk, a cannon ball, found recently by Edward R. Harding, 369 North Seventh West, and now on display at the Herald office would no ' doubt have an interesting tale. Mr. Harding ran across the iron sphere while cleaning up tin cans from a point right on the line of the Olu ln Jiau wall of early days, used in Black Hawk times. Black Hawk veterans and others familiar with early day Utah history will no doubt find pleasure in examining exam-ining the ball and speculating specu-lating on its probale history. The number "10" is stamped on the sphere's side. According to some pioneers , the ammunition was left here at the time Johnston's army came through Utah, to . stop at Camp Floyd. Marie Antoinette, by wearing potato-flowers in her hair, made potato blossoms a symbol of coquetry. NATIONAL LEAGUE R H E Brooklyn 3 8 4 Philadelphia 7 10 0 Mungo, Peterson and Phelps, Klune; La Master and Atwood. Boston 0 6 3 New York 3 84 Lanning and Lopez; Castleman and Danning. Cincinnati 2 7 1 Pittsburgh 3 8 2 Hallahan and Lombardi; Bauers and Todd. Chicago 13150 St. Louis 12 12 2 Parmelee and O'Dea; Harrell and Ogrodowski. ! Coast League I TWO CASUALTIES IN TORNADO BENTON, Ark., April 24 0IP Maxie Zinn, 14, died today, mak ing a total of two killed in the tornado which swept the northern part of this city last night. The boy s father, Herman, 50, was killed and thirty other per sons were injured. Twenty houses were demolished and 24 badly damaged. City officials estimated damage at $50,000. The Only Benzoil Gasoline in Provo! STATE TESTED FRST GRADE rry a Fill of This Hy-Test Gag fj fet it Per Gallon k ijPr Across the Street South from B. Y. U. Standing of the Teams W. L. Pet. Los Angeles 12 7 .632 San Diego k 13 8 .619 San Francisco 11 7 .611 Sacramento 12 9 .571 Seattle 10 8 .556 Mission 8 12 .400 Oakland 6 13 .313 Portland 5 13 .278 tvitlv (DELEARI, EAT CLOTIHI C Friday's Results R. H. E. Sacramento 8 10 0 San Diego 9 13 2 Batteries Klinger, Murray, Newsome, Seinsoth and Cooper; Hebert. Pilette, Salvo and Starr. 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