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Show A f i Be Roberts at To.. BYU: Kelay carnival ' jJlL L. CeneM; Roberts, founder tot the famed Brlgham Young tmiversltj Invitation Track and fjleld Meet and Relay Carnival, Wfvfiil attend the postwar revival of ' lie meet this year, Apr. 2926 , ;5id 27. (V. - &an of WY athletics, now re lied from the- University jcf Southern California physical education edu-cation faculty, would -attend-the rtlavt watt maris Raturrln .hv ' fj J Hart, chairman. His presence t A If expected to add additional color I , if the meet, eagerly awaited by litermountain high school. Junior high and Junior college athletes apier inree years warumo posi conemenL Classification and eleglbillty rtles in three divisions of track and field and tennis for Jurrtorj Ugh and tenth grade boyswas also announced Saturday by or-Hart. or-Hart. The McCloy system of grading grad-ing is being used for track .and field, designed to equalize com jtltion and fully consider age, neignt ana weigni, inus, young boys who are small in height and height will not be compelled to compete against youths wbq are taller, larger and . older,-. even though they may be in the -same grade. :?--: a Division one for junior: high boys includes those with a point tore of less than 785 ' points based on the McCloy formula, fell details of which have -been xoailed each participating school. V uenerauy, u memoes me younger smd smaller boys. Division two rt cbmorises larger and older Junior Wgn boys witn a Aicuioy score oi 185 points or more. Division three Ibdudes tenth graders who have. Hot reacnea tneir iin Dircnaay by the opening date of the second semester. A t Two divisions are scheduled for I tennis competition, with seventh, eighth and ninth grade students in one, and tenth graders in the , other. One singles and one doubles . team may represent each school ifl each of these two divisions. V Xach player may participate in A either singles or doubles, but not ffi both. Junior high and tenth graders placing in the first five in track ind field events will receive certificates cer-tificates of achievement according to place. Schools winning first .or tfecond in relays will receive the enlevement certificates, ar I will each member of the winning learns. try - W.:t. ..x.:Z v, J i II ,; J ::, . E. L. 'GENE" ROBERTS Equitable Life Leads Bowlers Lmajor league STANDING W. Equitable Life 28 Oscar Carlson s 27 Academy Hotel ... . 22 Bob's Billiards 20 Bullocks Billiards .. .. 18 Madsen's Cleaning ....... 17 High team series, Equitable LLife. 2523. High team Life, 890. High individual Olsen, 532. High single game L. Stephens, 211. Equitable Life kegling team goes into the final week of play in Major league bowling nursing one point advantage over tne L 16 17 22 24 26 27 game, Equitable series, M. 4 TENNESSEE STAR SIGNS WITH CARDINALS . ' CHICAGO. ADril 6 OJ.R) Bob fiobelsteln, captain and guard of toe university oi Tennessee toot-ball toot-ball team last fall, signed rtoday tp play with the Chicago Cardinals Card-inals of the National football league. Dobelstein is the- 42nd gjlayer to be signed by the Cards, a B The sun has about one-half as tnuch pull on the tides as does the Spoon. Oscar Carlson five - Both squads came through this weeks play with 4 point wins to keep the race tighter than a fat man's pants. ' - In the final round of play scheduled for Wednesday night the Insurance boys meet the Sport Shop quintet for the second half title. Carlsons must win three of the four points to take honors while Equitable can tuck away the flag with a 2-2 split. The lineups for the all import ant clash will be Carlsons: Mike Kammermeyer, Lyman Madsen, Lee Weight, Andy Andrus and Charley Elliott. Equitables: Len Callister, Albert Kirkpatrick, Bill Collins, Francis Olsen, Tom Mc Kay and Henry Child. WANTED ALL KINDS OP HIDES! Highest Prices Paid for BONES WOOL HIDES PELTS FURS and dead and useless animals. Pelt prices for dead and use-lesa use-lesa sheep. Prompt Service UTAH HIDE & TALLOW CO. t Miles West of Spanish Fork Phone 38 Ernie Bonham Signs With Yanks SACRAMENTO, Cal.. April 6 (U.R) Erne Bonham, right handed pitcher for the New York Yankees, Yank-ees, said today he had signed for the 1946 season. Bonham, who has been a hold- lout since before the training seas on opened, said he had agreed on contract terms in a telephone conversation with Larry Mac-Phail. Mac-Phail. head of the Yankees. He will leave here by plane Mon day and report in New York. ' He has been working out with the Sacramento club of the Pacific Pa-cific coast league. lff If? Tennis Matches VifliProv7-0 B. Y. high school mad a clean sweep of seven matches "against Provo Friday, serving notice in no uncertain terms that the - Y" school will be the team to beat in local 1948 tennis competition. Out of total of 11 sets played In the three singles and , two doubles matches. .Provo rsc-queteers rsc-queteers took only one. In the second doubles event. Dean Rig-by Rig-by and Gordon Loverldge of Provo Pro-vo came back to take the second set of the match with Kent Staheli and John Swenson, 5-7, but dropped the first set, 6-2, and the last, 6-3. , Two of the "Y" high singles entries en-tries practically shut out their Bulldog opponents, when Bob Kirkpatrick downed Richard Soerry, e-i, e-o, end Harold Cbristensen set . down Ab Hed onist. 6-0. 6-1. In the third singles match. Kay Bandley of Provo extended Jim Rawiings of B. x. high to 6-3, 6-4 before dropping the match. Vern Whatcott and Lamar Raw-lings Raw-lings formed an effective Wildcat doubles team to whip Bob Smith and Jim Gessford, 6-0, 6-1, in the second doubles event. The matches were played on the B. Y. U. courts. Fighting Step Wins $10,000 Cap NEW YORK. April 6 (U. Mur-logg Mur-logg Farm's Fighting Step, dupli cating the 1940 victory of his daddy. Fighting Fox. won the $10,000 Paumonok handicap at Jamaica today as 55,961 fans wel corned racing to New York for the 1946 season by pouring S3. 412,875 Into the mutuel machines. The chestnut speedster, taking the lead In the stretch, ran his opposition op-position into the ground in the final drive and scored by three-quarters three-quarters of a length over Sun shine stable's favored Buzfuz. Louis Prime's Play Pretty, which formerly ran as Pique, was third. Greek Warrior was fourth with Paper Hill. Sir Bim. Alison Peters and Cassis completing the field in the order named. The crowd, which bet $658,074 on the 37th renewal of the his-tric his-tric stake, installed Buzfuz an $.85 to $1.00 favorite and the Zaca-weista Zaca-weista celdlng gave them a run for their money, until Fighting Step, winner of the American Derby last year, made his bid. The Murlogg speedster earned $8,000 and paid $10.00, $3.50 and $2.90 across the board. PAGE 10 "gfMitff SUNDAY HERALD To Talk Ducks MW.WM,W'gV)FW''ll'l'J'lHlll.lli,,.. ,1 ' V ' , . v u , i " - , " ( 1 v I COL. E. S. RUSSENHOLT 1 Sportsmen Asked To Answer Cards In an effort to gain more com plete information on Utah's an nual harvest of game birds and animals, the fish and game depart ment is sending post-card ques tionnaires to some 10,000 sports men who purchased hunting licenses lic-enses in 1945. The cards can be filled in with very little effort and will supply valuable data needed to assure proper state and federal legisla tive attention, as well as improv ed management of wildlife re sources. Sportsmen receiving the cards are urged to mi ana return tnem as soon as possible. WYOMING CALLS SPECIAL SESSION CHEYNNE, Wyo., April 6 (U.R) The Wyoming legislature today was ordered to meet in special session on April 13 to consider emergency housing ana educational educa-tional appropriations for the University Uni-versity of Wyoming. The call .was issued by Gov. Lester B. Hunt. Drawing Cards Local Sportsmen To See Films Of factory Central Utah sportsmen may see one of the most Interesting films Tuesday evening ever offered duck hunters ..of this area when "Ducks Unlimited" sponsors the showing of The BIgT)uck Factory," Fac-tory," story of Canada's great waterfowl breeding grounds. The showing, in technicolor, will be in the south court room of the city and county building at 8 p. m. Col. E. G. Russenholt, director of operations for "Ducks Unlimited" Unlim-ited" in Canada, will show the film and have some Interesting information for .local sportsmen, according to Harold B. Makin, sports enthusiast. Tne great upmn fight made by "Ducks Unlimited" to save this wild duck from extinction, will be vividly portrayed in the story of the association's work In re habilitating vast areas in western Canada's three prairie provinces of Albert. Manitoba and Sas katchewan, where 80 per cent of North America's ducks breed. Advance Ad-vance notices say the film depicts some of the most remarkable scenes of ducks and geese ever taken. The healthy restoration areas in those once drought-wasted territories ter-ritories of the dominion's prairie provinces are a far cry from the barrenness of the same acreages back in tne middle 1930's before Ducks Unlimited, supported by thousands of duck hunters throughout Utah and the United States, stepped into the picture and started its great waterfowl conservation work. vv t memnersnip has crown steadily. The great waterfowl conservation group was incorporated incorpor-ated eight years ago during the "wild duck depression" when devastating drought threatened extermination of migratory wateriowi. Bowling Figures Bulldogs Yallop Juab Mine In Opening Baseball Game, 14-3 4- U. S., Filipinos To Open Play In Davis Cup Round ,SAN FRANCISCO. April 6 (U.R) First challenge round of the Davis Cup will be played between the United States and Philippines teams on hard courts here June 1-2, if the Island team is willing to waive grass court require ments, it was announced today. James Moffatt, vice president of the northern California tennis association, said present plans call for playoff of the challenge matches on the courts of the California Cali-fornia tennis club in central San Francisco. w FIRST ENTRANT IN GOLF TOURNEY CHICAGO, April 6 (U.R) Wil-ford Wil-ford Wehrle of Racine, Wis., today to-day became the first entrant, for the 44th annual western amateur golf championship to be played Aug. 5-11 at Duluth, Minn. Wehrle won the western amateur ama-teur crown in 1937 at Los Anseles by defeating "Chuck" Kocsis 'of Detroit 1 up in the finals. Comely Jackie Meehan reads automatic scoreboard, latest device unveiled at the Ameri can Bowling Congress tournament tourna-ment in Buffalo. It keeps accurate ac-curate score for individuals or two five-man teams, indicates last frame bowled, strikes and spares, and identifies the bowler bowl-er by number or in Jackie's case, we should say flgurev- Vermont Ski Star Takes Lead In Alfa Tournament ALTA, Utah, April 6 (U.R) Big Bill Distin, ace from the Mt. Mansfield, Vt., ski club was the man to beat today as 30 of the nation's top skiers got ready for the downhill runs, second event on the 1946 Alta Snow Cup tour nament. - The downhill, over a tortuous course from ,the top of Alta- Germania pass, was scheduled for 1 p.m., MST. Distin took the lead for the cup by swishing down a steep slalom course and through the flags in 1:31.4 to take first place in tne opening, siaiom runs. Second place went to Dick Mo-vitz Mo-vitz of Salt Lake City, 17 seconds slower than Distin, with Johnny Fripp of the Mt Tremblant club in third place, 1.4 seconds behind Movitz. Rhona Wurtele of Montreal's Penguin club won the women's slalom in 2.01.4, just ahead of her twin sister, Rhoda. Barbara Kidder, Kid-der, university of Denver, was third. Former National Champion Alf Engen, now skiing for the Sun valley, Ida., club had been picked to win tne siaiom but wound up in fifth place after taking several bad falls. Coast League R H E Portland 1 5 1 Oakland 2 7 1 Helser and Holm, Adams (8); Speer and Raimondi. San Francisco 5 8 3 San Diego 2 8 2 Lien, Stutz (9) & Sprinz; Dum- ler. Eisenmann (5) Knowles (8) & Rice. A strong Provo high baseball nine, fresh from a 14-3 victory over NepnJ, will take the diamond as the favorite Monday when the Bulldogs dash with B. Y. high. The game, originally scheduled to open the season last Wednes day, was cancelled because of rain Prep Nines Play Fast Baseball SALT LAKE CITY Of den and South put on one of the classiest early season baseball battles Friday, the Tigers winning z to o. it was e typical mid-season mid-season pitchers' battle with Oi- den's Melvin (Red) Van Workem holding the classy South team to three hits. South's RIggy Walk-ingshaw Walk-ingshaw gave up only five hits to tne winners, but one of them was a home run blow, off the bat of Jack Wald, Ogden's slugging slug-ging left fielder. Davis high whitewashed West, 1? to 0 as George Fisher, sensational sensa-tional hurler who played in the Esquire East-West game last year, whiffed 18 West batters. Other prep scores: East 18, Jordan 1. Cyprus 5, Bingham 2. Softball Meeting Set for Tuesday A meeting for formulating plans for the 1946 softball season will be held Tuesday, April 9th, at 7:30 p. m,, in the city recreation rooms in the city building. Anyone interested in playing softball this season, or anyone interested in-terested in organizing a team, is cordially invited to attend. Several teams have already intimated in-timated they are ready to play. 20-30 club, Oscar Carlsons. A. and H. Market have made preliminary arrangements to enter the fast Recreation league. There is a possibility that Ed Darling will enter his classy Fee-Gee Fee-Gee team again this season. Tentative plans include organizing organ-izing two loops of different clas sifications. It is hoped that six entries will be available for the fast league, and either six or eight teams in a group composed of church teams. and will begin at 2:30 p. tomor row at tne x stadium. Howard Ford pitched 'a steady five-hit game for eight innings in the Bulldog-Nephl game here Friday Fri-day and held a safe lead from mid-game on. Bill Keith relieved Ford and worked the remaining inning safely, allowing one hit. Provo will be smarting under the 7-0 shutout which the Wildcats Wild-cats handed them Friday in ten- mis as spring athletic competition opened between the two schools, and nothing would please the Bulldogs belter than a thumping victory tomorrow for revenge. Box score for the Bulldog-Wasp Bulldog-Wasp game: JUAB (3) Migelson, ss K. Stephenson, 2b. .. 3 K. Christensen, c 4 N. Christensen, lb. .. 3 Pelliott, c 3 Cowan, cf 3 B. Dixon, 3 b 1 Belllston, If . . . .... 2 N. Stephenson, rf 1 Sells, rf . . . 0 M. Stephenson, p 1 Francon. 3b. . . .... 2 Sperry 0 Ab. H P A 3 10 1 1 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 i n o o o o o l o Total PROVO (14) Thomas, If. Ford, p Green, ss. . Brown. 2b. . Stewart, cf. Harris, lb. . Ewell, rf. Kelly, 3b. . . Clows rd. If. McKay, rf. . Williams, cf. Keith, p . . Laney, 3 b. 25 6 18 5 Ab H P A 4 4 2 4 3 3 3 2 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 2 1 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 Bees can make honey without flowers or bollen. They can get nectar from the base of partridge pea leaves. Boise Pilots Off To Training Camp BOISE, Ida., April 6 (U.R) Hadyn Walker, owner, and Walter Walt-er Lowe, manager of the Boise Pilots of the Pioneer league left this morning with eight players for the club's spring training camp at Prosser, Wash. ' Accompanying Walker and: Lowe were Eddie Sefkk, Bill Stenger, Louis Tamone, Harold Lowe, Don Conyers, Travis Foster, Fos-ter, John Urzi and Jack Lopes. Walker said Neil.Ownes, Rob ert Lizee, Cliff Barker. Mocell Ison, and Glen Sooter will report direct to Prosser tomorrow, Lowe said "five or six others" are to report to the camp Monday and that he expects to have "20 or 22 on the field" Tuesday. Total 31 10 21 7 Score by innings: Juab 000 002 13 Provo 101 531 x 14 Errors Maneelson, K. Chris tensen, N. Christensen, Bendixon, Belllston 2, Green, Kelley. Stolen bases Ford, Green 2, Stewart 2. Sacrifice hits Stewart, K. Steph enson, Mangelson, N. Christensen, Runs batted in Mangelson. N. Christensen. Brown 2. Elliott.. Stewart, Harris 3. nnings pitched By Wankler 4. by M. Steph enson 1, by Ford 6, ny Keitn 1.. Winning pitcher Ford. Losing pitcher Keith. Hits Off Wan kler 7, off M. Stephenson 3, off Ford 5, off Keith 1. Struck out By Ford 9. by Keith 1. by Wankler Wan-kler 5, by Stephenson, 3. Bases on balls Off Ford 1, off Keith 2. Off Stephenson 1. off Wankier 8. Hit with pitched balls K. Stephenson (by Ford), wild pitches wankier z. passed naus By K. Christensen 2. Time Of game 1:30. UmpIre Buttle. RENT A GAR By the Hour, Week or Month! Hertz Driv-ur-Self System P. E. ASHTON CO. 191 So. Univ. Are. Pbona 155 CALL 300 For Nationwide Moving Service! Agents for Bekins, Allied Van Lines. Local and Ions distance moving. Packing, moving, storage, crating and shipping. Wc can move you to any city in the world. Utah's ' Finest Movta? Service YELLOW CAB & TRANSFER CO. CALL 300 ANYTIME "iknowTt's unfortunate and'you have my sympathy. But some- - M fl II oooy s got io pay ir it. WE8T ' " """"" ' y is H FIFTH WEST o as LOUIS JEPPSON'S SERVICE mffWSP Mi Maybe you've noticed 4 hat my station here in Provo looks different lately? Well, our new paint job and new Chevron Gas Station sign have just one purpose to tell you Ym an independent businessman. That's been the situation right along, but not everybody every-body knew it. JUST INSTALLED A NEW AUTO-ROCK LUBRICATION SYSTEM We Really Grease a Carl . GIVE US A TRY CORNER THIRD SOUTH WIFTH WEST PHONE 1550 PROVO Operating Hours 6a.nutol2 p. nu-r- Open Sundays It's E A T E R Apr. 21 TIME TO DRESS UP! as a Priced at . . . Meis Top Coats Just Received! 4 of all wool "Camelaire" in tan. Just the right weight for spring. De- ? v signed by master craftsmen for young men who demand the most quality and style. $22.50 Boys' Suits For Graduation! Dark worsted or gray and tan tweeds in single and double breasted breast-ed styles. Just right for graduation. gradua-tion. Sizes 11 to 16 Priced ftt i 12. Others At $11.00 and $14.40 am 957 m Men's SLACKS A new shipment just arrived. ar-rived. New fabrics- and designs. Sizes 28 to 36. Priced from . . . , 90 SWEATERS Coat style or slipover in blue, tan, brown or maroon. ma-roon. All sizes. Special .... lt75 Men's and Boys' Sport Coats 1 r Snappy tweed sport coats in checks and herring-bone weaves. Blues, tans and . greys. Nicely fitting single breasted styles. Sizes 12 To 18 Sizes 36 To 42 12.95 '16.50 BOYS' HATS Made of aeroplane poplin, pop-lin, weather sealed and shower proof. Priced $ at &e5 BOYS' PANTS Large assortment of boys dress pants. Gabardines, worsteds and tweeds. Priced $5 ftt? from 3tV2 MEN'S LEATHER COATS of Genuine Cabretta Leather. 30 long Zipper belted model, fully lined flC Sizes 36 to 46 ONLY BOYS' MATCHED SUITS Two-tone Sport Jackets with contrasting Gabardine Pants. Smart and practical. Sizes 6 to 10 SPECIAL! SUIT CASES Locks' - LUGGAGE 21M9 and 17" fr fV Taxes paid .... Z9 V i NORM'S CLOTHES SHOP On The Sunny Side Of The Street Provo, Utah Cowboy SHIRTS Embroidered Collar Sizes S' S to 16 .t 3.97 |