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Show n 11 ( Oh i 1 1 1 - i iiferz jF ' Return Bout- Nov. 1 By HARRY FERGUSON United Press Sports Editor NEW YORK. Aug. 23 01E The pitcher and how that Henry Armstrong can pitch 'em! went to the well once too often. - He lc?t his lightweight championship cham-pionship to Lou Ambers last night; jost it after winning 46 consecutive consecu-tive bouts against featherweights, lightweights, and "welterweights; lost It because so many--of his piston punches landed on the. belt anethat five of-the 15 rounds were taken away fromVhfrjy' be-". be-". . cause of fouls. ' x ;, " -- , - . The two tough littlenohibres vrent at it,for 45 minutes of slam--bang fighting- under the hot lights at Yankee stadium, but to - the : customers back inTthe $16.50 rire- side seats it must have looked like ; j a dullish business. For Armstrong and Ambers were swarming on top : of each Other all evening long, hammering away at the belly "and thfiejun with punches that never txaveled more than a foot and a half. There "were -no long, clean Sows,- no knockdowns - just; the flesh. i I - : r Cotton i actually grown In colors on MARVELS have grown to leadership as the quality cigarette for lew money. air ror -MARVELS i ,' t " v - reCIGAR ETTE of Quality 1 - 0) i- v. aU Q Beer 7Vou;..U Our Coils Are Thoroughly Cleaned. After EyeryBarrci. r V DRINK DRAFT BEER : .WHERE IT IS KEPT AND SERVED RIGHT! " American and . National League scores ' by Innings, dally'. " i Direct Service!-. - ' v--11 - Direct t 1 ... .. , , . . . ..m M...IL. . ...i. ir, the .canvas. " ! t. - X - . - . . - - -. . - . - . .r - - , ' ' ' . -. z)e Mound, 3Ieet Again Nov. 1 Y. They are going to meet again on Nov. . X this time for Armstrong's, Arm-strong's, welterweight title- and it's a good thing, for it may settle sortie of the' arguments that will still be going on then. . There was a" wide range of bpin ion on who won what rounds and way. Keieree Aruiur uonovan awarded eight rounds to Ambers and. seven1 to Armstrong; Judge Frank Fullam gave the same verdict; ver-dict; but Judge Bill Healey awarded award-ed Ambers 11' rounds, Armstrong three, ; and called one even. The, j seven for Ambers,six for Armstrong, Arm-strong, and called : the third and sixth rounds even.; , . - , , - x"; Tough To Scored- . 'W It was 'a tough one to jscore. There was never ' a time' when punches weren't flying. , Every body agreed Armstrong' was . hitting hit-ting in fpul' territory, but everyone every-one " also agreed it. was uninten tional.; '-'.'yfiy-'- f- j. v . Armstronr - forced the fighting almost all the - way. On and on he. went, -with that - curious crab- . like waddle, his arms flaining away- snorting blood out .of his mouth and nose; spitting his rubber rub-ber mouthpiece ; to the canvas when it ihterfered with his breath ing. : Ambers, constantly in re-j treat, spent jthe evening, with his back .against the ropes, .but that short right uppercut whistled against Armstrong's jaw and-must have .made hamburjger7tut-of the inside of the"" negro's mouth.vIt wa.3" in those .battles on the ropes that Armstrong's punches strayed into . foul--territory, but-Ambers never complained' - 1-i-rr Slug Toe .To; Toe" '- , You will walk many a " weary mile through turnstiles leading into prize fights before you will see anything to equal .the 14th round. In the first 10 seconds of it Armstrong bulled - Ambers to the ropes and there they stayed in one spot for the remaining two minutes and 50 seconds ' of the round. Neither tried to duck or block a punch. Neither tried to boi.'""They weire. a couple-of kids in a back alleys slugging it out. : Armstrong belted - Ambers in the belly and Ambers , slugged Our Big 15c rl Service!'"', PAGE FOUR SAVE IT FOR LATER, BOYS i. y. i - V.-.. : :-k.. v. ' iT?Nii jdi Tony Galen to left, and Loif Nova give preview' of wHat disposl-x disposl-x ; tions will be like when they fight in PhiladelDhia. Sept." 7. V - v -.... BeesySigti Glen Berge v Glen. Berge, "who has been burn, ing up the Industrial league a monds : with ' double plays as a member of the ProvoTimps infield, in-field, today had Coined; the Salt Lake Bees.. ' Berge appearedSvon the " Salt Lake lineup Tuesday v against the Lewiston . Indians; - He v - replaced Dbn Trower shortstop who was removed by injuries. oievc iiutiei, vuierau iviuciiu catcher, hasalso beeriadded to the SairTiake roster.' for the remainder re-mainder of the season. . . . ' ; . . ': ' x - Berge .is a former B: Y. U. student. He joined the Tjmps at the start' of the second half after Dividend quit the league. c-. Tn.'. 4 1 - T" 1 J 1 Armstrong in the jaw. And there they stayed and bled and took it as though theirshoes were rooted into the canvas. DAILY HERALD, J r si ..w. . . '.' ,.',,.v.V,', -?- alt Lalt Team De PAKDOE TENNIS1 PLAY .- W. . L. sPct.- Salt Lake City ..4 ,3: O Provo 2 L JLenl -JProvo'srlippe ;for i aTardoe--xup title match was- hlaatrf""TiipsH;iv j when- SaltLake's strong team J LDianKea - a visiting Lem team.-, i to 0, in the final meet of the regular, reg-ular, schedule. - J 5 vjhe Salt Lakers. the only players play-ers to turn back pfovd, have wort three straight. They will meet' the capital city's , northern 'division team for the Pardee title '.Tuesday's if : results: :. ' . Richard Warner," Salt Lake, lef. Hardy Jenkinson, Lehi, 6-2, 6-1; Cleo Sin-nard, Sin-nard, Salt Lake; def. Keith1 Trane, Lehi, 6-1, 6-2; Ned Bennion, Salt Lake, def.., Don Evans : Lehi 6-2, 6-2 ; .Sinnard-Bennion def. Evans-Ralph Evans-Ralph v Allred; 6:1, 6-2; Warner-Calvin Warner-Calvin VNelson def. ' Tra n i. a iio mpman e-Z, 9-7.- Bown Wins Women Blind BogeySEyeiii . Y- , ,0. .A.VVY Mrs. T)a Bown wnn'tnA in the Women's blind bogey event Tuesday at the municipal golf coursp. - " . - 0 . She had a 65 net. . '-'Y ?'Y' A large group turned - oMt' for the day's competitive veht.-- '; Buy Now and Save! Investigate New -EASY PAY PLAN! Sessford's, Inc.x Pishing Tackle 47 North University Ave. ePardde 'A l.onc k. X8'.SS3 Orcm'' . 1 . . . , .000 Y' . v ; LIPO TD&0P SPGGM v 6 j eylindsrs Paris . Extra- 1. Check Battery, Wire and, All Connections . Y- 1 2. Test, Clean and (.Adjust ' Spark Plugs 3. Test Compression ' 4. Remove'; and Sychronize" Distributor, Adj. Points 5. Test Coil and Condensor 6. ' Set Timing . . . Have Your Generator, ' Starter, Carburetor and Electrical Equipment " serviced iy specialists, factory-trained men. LATEST EQUIPMENT - FACTORY TRAINED MEN WEDNESDAY AUGUST Railton Exceeds 6 vMiles Per Minute As Gobb Sets Record B;,4 MILT JACOB . BONNEVILLE SALT FLATS, Aug. -23(U.K) "Speed limit, 500 milesan hour!" ... ' ' . , There's a statute on the Tooelle county books that reads like that. And a sign on the , outskirts of the Bonneville salt flats ia . even more suggective: "No r Speed Limit." t -' SJr Malcolm Campbell, HLTtah's ownvAb . Jenkins, Captain George E. T Eyston and John Cobb have made ' the flats ; the racing center of , the world. j , ' That - wa eveii . more- sig- ' t nif leant today after Coblv a .'London fur broker, had boosted boost-ed the official mile mark to . SC8.85 miles per hour. This . Is far from the Tooele . speed limit . but It is - a speed un- . precented In the history of the . world. , , ' y . ; ' Cobb's Raiito'n Red ; Lion -e hot through the . measured mile like a great airliner with clipped wings. It was "streak , ' across the horrizon that regis-x r tcred more' than six miles; minute. . Some 7500 people turned out for 9. halfr minute . look at the turtle-shaped, three-ton car which has made y the Britain king of speed. ' . : It took Cobb less than 10 seconds sec-onds to travel between the t'elec-tric t'elec-tric eyes' -which were usedf for the timing. Airplane 'Engines Cobb's, racing shi powered vith two 1300-horsepower airplane engines.- UnlikexEyston's machine which set 'avnew. wortd mark last summer, the Railton v has front and Irear wheel' drives- Tires, the nearest-erfectr ever used on the flats, .have but . one . quarter' inch pf outside rubber , and cosVaround jjsOO each. The tires were chang ed - after each measured mile is An aluminum shell, welghref eated R-ulon Henrichsen-Ja Irig but 500 pounds, , provides thexstreamliningf orthe Kail-ton. Kail-ton. It IsYplaced ' over a steel framework which ' holds k the -enffines. Two rear wheels are tw; fjpet (.closer tpccthcf .than, 111? in U 111 U1C IIUIIU uj: HIV machine. . -Y s- V'An Jenkins made the salt flats popular as a racing 'center in Sep-:embcr, Sep-:embcr, 1932. by 1 covering , 2712 miles in a 24-hour run. The ma chine he used was a Pierce-Arrow, stripped of top and Renders.; -Record Climbs s' Yx Sir Malcolm f!amrjbell came to uiic xix.u9 iu 10011. aiiu qci, wit: uii- believeabiejN301.1?92 recordSkep-tics recordSkep-tics : were saying, that was the fastest man would travel on land, 3Ut have swallowed T their words pushed ' the - mark x to 311.42 in 1937,. then canie babk inl938 to gain - the world attentionVwith his high of 357.50. ' , Y ' X- Two Illustrations ;can easily show' how fast Cobb was'tfaV cling today- Imagine yoursel crossing a street. You see the , - Railton coming, in your direc- v tlon from a .mile down vthe course, ytt lbfore you can get . tothe other side you will be struck down by the machine." S . a . . ...a a a . A I -J . tJODu pouia ' nave iraveie . illlUUII s,lllIVl OUtaF . phbre signals each a block x anart. befoiie the crreen light . 'i;iuui;eu wi i cu v, ' Ideal Race Track . p The salt flats offer many ad-jvantages. ad-jvantages. Moisture in the salt provides a.coolingr effect for 'fast moving tires and also allows traction, trac-tion, with surprising lack, ofweap. N1 obstructions mar the ' course. Racing - cars could wander- a distance dis-tance of many feet and in some deletions ' as f ar , as four - to ' five miles without crashing Into objects. ob-jects. : - Y . v ' Cobb broke the record at ; dawn today. It takes ' but two , , , ' hours of sunlight to draw u.' raoisturer to., the 'top crust i "which makes the course sticky' tnr driving. This Is the'. most evident disadvantage. - - The salt surface, itself, on. 1 7. Cfceck Valves, .Adjust Over head Valves. - . g Test Fuel Pump 0. Clean" and Oil Air Cleaner 10. Adjust Carburetor 11. CJheck' Generator 12. Check Starter ' Y All Motor Adjustments Put i Up to Original Factory J ' . Specifications 23, 1939 . r - f . thearea where' the racing is heldyxto an average, of five feet' thick. The salt Is white .and so hard it is with dlffl- Icult that inarkers are drilled lnto place along 'the course. " Although beingorous and filled with saturated brine, within a few inches of , the uppeV crust, the material is so rigid . it can support many tons, large suncracks dot the surface but they are smoothed before the runs. . - ' : Cobb, Eyston, Campbell and Jenkins have agreed ,that if thereJ is any place in the worlds where man will finally reach 500 miles an .hour; the Bonneville salt flats will figure in, .,-'' .'V JaclCThurgood, Gaorge OTst Din City Titles : City : champions were v crowned in -men's ' and juniors' singles divisions di-visions Tuesday as Provo's annual an-nual tennis tourney advanced another an-other round towards, completion. 1 Jack Thurgood won the men's title1 by turning back . Sterling Strate, .1-6, 6-3, . 6-3, in ; ft, hard fought niatch. The ' new " city champ was listless in' the first set but came back strong in" the remaining two to take the title. George Fliflet, in the junior division, was the other, player , to win a title Tuesday. He dropped Toni Pardee, 7-6, 6-1 Pardoe had a 0-40' advantage in the , eleventh, game . but was not steady enijughv Doubles Matches . Doubles . matcheswent forward on every frontrLee Knell-Doug Busterud--won their . way to the boysWinals with two ; wins. Theyl Gallup, 6-2, 6-0, and DonaldAllen-; Bruce Ldddiard, 6-4, 5-7, 6-2. Tttey will meet' the winner of- theEarl Wallace-Frank Jansbn ys JKeirt Tolboe-Dan- Lambert malcb; for the title. Y Y A ' j . " . t . Y the semifinals by upsettijrg Earl vvauace-jacK jiacaeiDerger, seeu ed team. 6-4. 3-6. 0-4' Wallace Janson. def.-Bob Bodtbl-Loren Bar low, 5-T.Y10-3. 8- ' Other fesultsrMen's division CUrll and yfWinstOn tDalavst def. Kenneth Martin-Frank .Van Wagenen, 6-3, 3-6, 6-2 ; ! Marion Ol sen-LaV ajr Kump def.- Bill PrUsse Bob Mcrefield, 6-3, V 6.2; Don Richmond-Owen Dixon def, . Fred Taylbr-Kenneth Bray, 6-4, 4-6 -; Jack Thurgood-Allan Olsen 4ef. Art and Bent Johnson, 6-3 6-1; Claude and; Thornton Snow det. Jay- Shelley-Lynn Wright, 6-3 6-3. . , . Junior division Richard , Reese Glen; Snarr def. Bob . Sturgis-Hai 'ihomas, 6-5, 6-1; Ray1 Nash- Max Xix xdcf , Bert Thatcher-LeRoy- CrariefK6-l, 6 -3. v ationai League Li P.C Cincinnati ,70. 42 .625 5 46 586 Chicago Brooklyn . ....63Y53 .543 New' Ydrk I . . .......56 55 X505 Pittsburgh Y' . . . .'.51' , 5S AGS Philadelphia ,. A. '..35 .73 .324 . - - .Tuesday's "Results: Y Cincinnati 0, Philadelphia 4. St. Louis 5, Brooklyn. 8. , ) Chicago 2,' New ,York 4. Pittsburgh 8, Boston ;2Y AmericanXeiague .-.,. - ' Y W. L. P.C. New York i mi . 79 x 34 .699 Boston y . . . Chicago.. Cleveland .' Detroit - m A. 7X," 4: 634 f....;.63 ..... Y53 50 51 553 54 55 67 ,74' .522 .518 Y427 .345 Washington x. . Y . .50 Philatlelphia'X'. . . ,39 .Y SL Louis ... ,Vr. . .33 77, .300 .' Tuesday's Results ir Y '. "Philadelphia 4,. Detroit 9,i ' Boston 10, St; Louis 3. New York; 14, Chicago 5 (night game), Y Y Y"'-- ' : .' Cleveland' 6, , Washington 4 (night gamej. - Y '.".' - :; y Y V Coming Sunday . Iii a -HitY To . Top His Other, , ": Titans - - -;-. Y-' 4TARZAN -FINDS A SON" Better Plan To Y w YVVVW, - - 79. 5. Come Early Sunday! PIOfJEEP, WARD UPSETS SP, FORK -I TUESDAY'S RESULTS ' Sunshinecafe, Provo, 5, C. R. Clark, PI. Grove,- 4. Reddy Kilowatt, Provo. 6, WaU kins-Glen, Lehi o ' ' Pacific Super Heaters 17; Coca Cola, Payson,' 0. v - ' Pioneer Ward "M" Men, Provo, 11, Curleys Lunch, SpFork, 10. , '.v Y ' '-'-. n Y- -, ' 1 Pioneer ward "M" Men of Provo champ's of their circuit, provided the fireworks as . the city's invitational invita-tional Softball tourney got past its second night of play Tuesday. They droppedSpanish Fork's Cur-ley's Cur-ley's lunch, 11- to 10. It was a big inning, - the third, that put the game on ; Ice for Pioneer 'ward.' ! The Provooutfit tallied ten .times in that frame, thanks to two errors, thfee bases on. . balls, three singledand a homer. -' E. Killnack cnrriff' th wllrT jVhlch" started the rally.. He rode out: a nomer, , driving in Lefler andWoods ahead' of him. SeedetKTeam 1 Y Curley's Lunch,- one of the top teams in the tate and 'seeded in theProvo tourney, was rushed off Its feet by? the. drive. The Spanish Fork team had scored eight runs in the first ithree innings, then let uptii the seventh when they picked up- two, addltional scores. Pioneer played , errorless ball in , the final five ' innings.- They Jocal ' outfit went hitlss for the lastthree; Curley's Bowen striking YYAY-A- --YY:i 'jtX - Y A A Yonite's Tlie PJavsTcn-G-VJin! Over 200 Reasonsro. Join AtteixdEither Theatre - 1Iany Added Treats! " V TODAYy and r i t . ; i I t i .. f ft 1 : - . j 1 r . b 1 . . - r. t . f j t J .. 1. 1 1 n n il 1 . illil: in: Produced by Tod Browning:, ,Who fi&vcYou "Unholy three,' -.Dracula" - and "Devil Doll !w 1' Y Added Treats , lcte Smith Novelty "TAKE A CUE" MUSICAL COMEDY . Inafributo to Y Americanism. t j' . ... :y-;- ' r ' j Y 1 --Go-Feature- Uvl - IBIWt"ll f1" :' - :' : '"' ' Y '"' -'' '' out nine of the 10'incn facing him. Reddy Kilowatt, another .Provo entry, took eight inninpa before Winning from Lehi's Watkin-s-Glcn 6 to 5. Carter scored itho winning win-ning run on Baum'a single. Kilowatt committed eight errors. Watklns Glen got by without an error but walked 11 of the I'rovo club's men. $uper Heaters of.' Provo were hot, tallied six in the second and seven in the fourth to fini.Hir the game 'with Cola Cola pf Payson, 17 to 0. Overly was doing the cliucklng for the I'rovo team and struck out 11 men.- Freddie" Farmer's Sunshine Cafe had a sea re thrown into them by the C. R. Clark team of Ple.Lsant Grove, but the . Provo boy.s pro--tected a . 5 ; to 4X advantage with Gene Nelson striking out all three batters In the final frame. Lou Wells was the big noi.se for the P. G. team with a horpe run. Peters, , Vincent, ; Nelson.. Uailey and Johnson hit -doubles for the' locals. ''; ''..-:,'". : No games scheduled for tonig ht .. Pioneer League - r. . 46 L. Y? 50' r3 Pel. .571 .405 .4cr .444 Twin i Falls Pocatello Salt Lake Lewiston - Boise-Ogdcn Boise-Ogdcn 43 TV KS DAY'S RKs'l) LT.-4 Lewiston 7. Salt Lake 3. Ogden 6, Tvin Falls 5. Tocatello 7, Boise G. fliclit - Hll rauo in This lii'Fun (iaimH Y New Screen ProraninX TOMORROW! Living, brh- no, but with- on I h d I How Uit don? . KAC'C PUtttT . ; . 1K1CKI Caleb butlal ta ! your tt h with-out with-out inurf ? Th . ; ccmara ! Ui lrickl r. TODAY and TOMORROW! r ; PLUS : - ' Comedy LEON EIIROL ; , in "Moving Vanities'' V !rr I ' fj-tvtr y ?Yk 'it 11 1 i:,-.y '.,v'-;.v . i'i LATEST NEWS AUTO SPECIALIZTTD S 275 South University Ave. VICHY "1 Phone C43 7 -I |