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Show . ' ' ' . , A . 'a- "'f .'- . -. - v ..'. , f t-. (! .'.'.-,.(:" . 1 -Jn j : . A. , (''."f" yes Harman Arrives To Compete In Utah Golf olpust SALT LAKE CITY, JulyV (U.P.) One top-notch professionalgolf-er professionalgolf-er had arrived here for Utah's 943 $1000 open golf championship Friday and several others were expected to arrive today and tomorrow. to-morrow. First to put in an appearance was Sid Harman, Walla Walla. Wash. He arrived yesterday and already has gone a tune-up few holes at the Country Club. Lloyd Mangrum, Ryder cup golfer, was expecled to arrive here t day. Another top performer, Al Zimmerman of the AlderwoorJ tlub of Portland, aluo has assured assur-ed tournament officials that indefinitely in-definitely will be on hand for the meet. Hugh Thompson, Helena, Mont., amateur, has announced he will jiirive tomorrow to compete with the Simon Pures. Another amateur, ama-teur, Bud Maytag, fprmer trans-Mississippi trans-Mississippi champion, reports that his plans for participating are not yet definite. Friday Deadline Timps Tip Reds 15-6 Make 5 Double Plays In Beating Wings 9-8 ' - ,. Z . 4 .... . : . ... : ! 1 9 : : r. V' t "g-' L. 4 4 6 8 n 12 Two major items up for con- jiderction are replacing Ogden, Pet I which is dropping out of the loop, .733 3n ' mapping a schedule. Bob Bul-.733 Bul-.733 lock of Provo, league president. indicated today overtures will be made to the Air Base nine, ttrst naif victors in the Salt Lake amateur league, t t he Wings would like to join the (Exhib- industrial circuit And judging by h stiff competition they re oeen putting up in games with semi- .601 .461 .267 .200 INDUSTRIAL STANDINGS (Final First Half) W X rovo 11 Magna-Garfield .... 11 Pinney . 9 Gemmell . 7 Brigham 4 Ofcden 3 Sunday's Results Provo in, Ogden 6. Magna 10, Pinney 1 tion ). -ixtt a vo ri7C5TTT one Pinney 11, Amateur All-Stars ft j -,jr-' Fxhibition) Lloyd Shepherd pitched six-hit Wednesdays Schedule for seven innines Ae Wednesdays oneauie Uvorked as Provo drubbed the Og- Provo at M?gna,.5:30. j dcn outfit Sunday. Manager Lot Provo and Magna-Garfield were , Crnins himself, did the elbowing -oared today for their playoff and . ,n tm, ast two inninga. He was 'payoff game Wednesday at 5:30 nicked or two hitSf three walks it Magna, following tune-up v,c-, tnd in eighth but ones over tne noimay weenena. i ,.ei.ired the Reds in order in the The Timps went through the , rmth. Millergan, 2b. Basile, lb Bryant, 3b. Green, cf . ..... Kneeovich, rf. . Visconti, ss. . . . Kornick, If. ... Martin, c Mcuahan, p. 4' 4 3 4 4 4 1 Konick, p 1 1 2 1 1 0 2 0 1 2 1 1 3 1 7 0 0 2 O O 2 0 1 3 2 Totals 3210 24 12 PROVO Ab. H. O. X. Brooks, rf 4 1 1 1 Bird, cf 10 2 0 Kump, 3b. r 5 2 0 3 Page, lb 4 3 9 1 E. Jensen, If. 4 0 1 0 Berge, ss 4 2 3 Eggeitsen, c 4 2 4 1 Overly, 2b 4 l 4 4 Jackman, p 3 0 0 1 Totals 33 11 27 14 Score by innings: Air. . base 002 040 020 8 Provo 004 001 4 Ox 9 Summary: Runs Bird 2, Kum-Page Kum-Page 2, Berge 2. Eggertsen, Overly, Over-ly, Millergan, Basile, Bryant : 2, r,"" 2. Martin 2. Errors Bry-nnt, Bry-nnt, Basile, Kump, ' Overly. Stolen bases Millergan, Bryant, Brooks, Berge. Sacrifice hits Jackman McGahan. Two base hit--Pag. i Home .runs Green 2, Martin. Ruis batted in Basile, Page 2 Berge, Pitchers Come Through 'As-.Mdck::Whipjndian8 PROVO; UTAH COUNTY, UTAH TUESDAY, JULY 1941 PAGE'S'.- -?v . ... . - - ..v. .- . . . Hw MV A III. CSWM WUW Cf . 1. i r - : . a i. I United Pms Staff frrHnanint ftiai-iA ri 8 U.RV Gunder Hagg, swedisn NRW Tnwr Jniw a ijrhU.. wi alT'i distance runner end victor over a single double and triple to pace a 12-hit New York, attack in the nightcap. ALBUQUERQUE, N. M-. July "workout while enroute to the jyest . Gunder Elagg Hot In Condition Ydt ten v fnr.MMiitv of clinching a tie Vith . awe m-Basue, rag Z Berge, IP--. PI I P Z, f' TndnKtrialleap-ue first . fjgeortsen, Bryant, Martin, Green RtAf rifit Dntrifi '" for industrial league nrsi i)rtJ hammering two Ogden pitch- 5 KumD Overlv Brooks Double rUl NCI ClllllCd -If hoors by whioo th ' for n hits. They collected the aPmtoSit'J Ogden Reds, 15-6 Sunday and Palk number of and mx JStorSSeei t . hnnk th Air Base Iv.- ' "'n 10 ferpe 10 fage, uveriy 10 Friday night has been set w " " V en TkiTritv 4i lnW8' f"clLC" ""' Eerge: Overly to Berge to Page; datively a! deadline for the Pro- W. even further A totu of , kv, to Overlv. StrWk out - .mauvcu ue. u- bang-up holiday tilt Monday. -he Pame was the Provo base- d V , u thl o city tennis tournament which 005o,h aft,. inin; . I he .pamL Was. tne Y0. rr.k I By Jackman 3, McGahan 7. Bases hr. nnonii novt Mnnriav anrHinir tn . . " v" ; running, limp runners puiereu l 'nn holla nff Tpm.n R UnTlohon ! . till T tOrS. K 1 vialt U1" ways Sunday by thumping Salt 1 ?.ke Pinney, 10-1 at Salt Lake in an exhibition contest. Tf itri II ha TParl lftrnt ( "ccrcr nf 1h 7 J tVa.nd.entJievf ma,v b prcvo vs. Ralph Crowton of Mag-made Mag-made at that time or by calling ni.IU lash Wednesday for the title. Clegg has beaten Magna in the The Dixons will superivse icn-r icn-r s activities at the North park tcmrts each night this week from ies by 1 rd at 829 or Don at 063J3. Competition will be staged singles and doubles in the men's 6-, "':fZtY," tZn v . , . , . . J.st two engagements the two junior, boys' and women s di- Toama havo nnH Provo nlcr mivoH Hmihlea if i j . vujiuiio, oisu lUIAtu uuuuica 11 , l v,; ob-Jll .nH 1.-U th-re are enough entries. Every- rold out. 6 Additional Sports On Page Seven Officials Meet Shortly after the first half crown wearer is determined. Industrial In-dustrial league moguls will meet Wednesday at 8 p. m. at Salt Lake City to consider plans or second half play. rd and Lee Brooks leading with mtPhed ballP5rvnt hv T0.umn three thefts each: I Winninsr pitcher Jackman. Losine The, game with Air Baje was ; pitcher McGahan. Umpires an uphill battle thrbughout. The Wings took a 2-0 lead in the third but Provo came back in its half cf the inning to put across tour runs on a walk by Lee Bird (who Wignall and Buttle. OGDEN Ab. H. O. A. Nielsen, c 5 1 a drew four passes .in five, times ; rc.jivt ss 3 0 2 up), and hits by LaVar Kump, Len Mulligan, If 4 4 0 Sage, Glen Berge, and Armand Riskoskv. 3b 3 2 2 Eggertsen, , Evaavlb 3 0 12 The Wings spurted ahead" in jCoxey, rf 4 0 J the fifth with four runs as a re-! Norton, 2b. ... 4 0 2 suit of home runs by Doc , Green Morris, cf.-p 4 1 0 and Tommy Martin. Provo made. Lambson, p-cf 4 1 u :'c 5-6 bv Dushine over a run in th .cfxth. ajrf then the Timos ; Totals 2 5 0 3 r 0 1 Of" 3 1 2 war. shortage of- players - and driers other reasons have been given for the closest American liigue race in history, but the Philadelphia Athletics came up with a double-barrelled answer of their own today. l-! Pitchers Don Black and Lu-mdn Lu-mdn Jiarris furnished an answer ror the "how come?" contingent wihfeh has been trying to arrive at - an explanation for the fact that the Philadelphia Athletics are- only eight games away from the front-running New York Yankees, who hold only a two-game two-game edge over the WasTtlngton Senators. Btack, a rookie, and Harris, a veteran, came through with twin-foio-hitters .as the A's nipped the Indians, 2-1 and 7-0, to dro the. Tribe into seventh .place in a racje that features a major change in standings almost daily. Senators Split "the Senators divided with, the Tigers, winning a twilight game, 6-4- after losing a morning contest, 103. A crowd of 10,514 turned out forithe first encounter and 20,019 for; the second. Rudy York sparked a 14-hit Detroit De-troit attack off three pitchers in the. first game with his 10th mer as Dizzy Trout held Wash ington to six hits. Early Wynn allowed 10 Tiger hits in the second sec-ond contest, but scattered them effectively as his mates hammered ham-mered across Six runs in the first of four innings. Joe Gordon led the Yankees to a twin win over St. Louis, 3-2 and 8-5. He hit his ninth homer in. the top half of the llth to Chicago split With the Red Sox to remain tied for third ijlace with Detroit. Four Boston errors gave Chicago three runs' and a. 4-2 triumph tri-umph in the first game, but Yank Terry allowed only six hits to give the Red So?ta 6-1 decision In the nightcap. Brooklyn came out of a five-g.me five-g.me losing spell by trouncing Chicago, 6-3 and -2, to trim the National league's leading St. Louis Cardinals' margin to three games. The Red Birds split with the Phfl-lies. Phfl-lies. Augie Galan's triple with loaded bases sparked a four-run sixth -inninsr Dodger rally that gave Huok Newsom his ninth victory in Ihe first game Galan'also came through with a "grand-slam homer in the nightcap as Kirby Higbe and Ed Head halted . the Cubs with seven blows. The Phillies staged a batting r.pree in the first game, trimming the Cards, 15-2r as Coaker Trip-lett Trip-lett led a 16-hit assault with .successive .suc-cessive homers in the seventh and eighth. Stan Musial's seven th-in ning homer earned the Cards a 4-3 decision in the second game. Pittsburgh split with the Giants, winning -the opener, 8-4, but boxing box-ing in the nightcap, 9-0. The Pirates batted around in the third inning of the first to score six runs and clinch the game for Max Eul.cher. Ken. Chase pitched six-hit six-hit ball for his first senior league success in the nightcap. the best America has to offer in Greg Rice and Gil podds, has not yet reached peak condition. The amazing statement came from Sig Steinwall, his trainer, as the Flying SWede and his entourage entour-age stopped off here briefly for a coast from Chicago. s. -- Hagg said that the long traln--trip, on which he is being acconjVT panied by Dodds and his wife.vL would afford him a perfect chance .? for relaxation from strenuous,'?;, training,' and freedom from -psy-b j chological strain. IVV The Cincinnati-Boston header was postponed. double- IB iro to EDbinbEc Sturdy Comfortable Wear-Resisting f'gffflf'Fffmrrmfrrwfft n j 1 a 1111 swipg p.f 1 .. . Union Made 50 Years Organized Labor's Friend. LEMEN t.'A..-. 'AS-.1 clinched the contest in the seventh The last coupon number 6 in your - I ptevefrt tood .e ,09' .A. U .wan &;?J&& X m bom expires L ;. - 34 9 24 16 4;; irs rim m w 70 'WMX&VQWFM- r- rJ Let your Pep. 88-Vico man flush your crankcase and chngeiyoi;,bU:jItsv v good idfia to do that every time you change coupons in yourA bopklevery I " t- ; piuvtru its 'gu ijuaiiry. in severe ,cesu.ior many yca w wc' micnuoaauiq trea. J AndV it's a good idea, too, to use a light, weight. oilrthis summer since ; ' vftii are not iicincr mip m mnrh - - - , Ct. S. i - PROVO Bird, cf Christiansen, 2b. Kump, 3b -, i Hall' If,' .". .'.'.'.'.".'.'..' Eerge, ss. gpertson, c ". Overly, c TX)ok.s. rf . Shepherd, p , Collins, p 6 3 3 3 5 4 6 0 6 3 1 2 0 0 1 0 1 2 11 2 1 1 1 2 10 0 0 1 2 1 0 0 0 Q 3 40 11 27 13 Totals ore by Innings: Tden .... 000 201 030 Provo .... 112 502 31x 15 .. Summary: Runs Bird 2. Kunn 2. Page 4, Hall 2, Berge 3, Egbert Eg-bert son. Brooks. Nielsen 2. Bailey; M"?ligan 2. Riskoskv. Errors ailiv, Risosky 2, Evans. Nortdh 2, Ppge. Stolen bases Nielsen, TMrd 3. . Christiansen 2j Kump, BrooVs 3. Two base hit ! Mulligan. Shepherd, Berge, Eg-pertson. Eg-pertson. Three base- hit - Nisel-rer. Nisel-rer. Home run Riskosky. Rms bfl td in Pa pe 2 Rbnh rd E"-trettson E"-trettson 5, Brooks 2, Hall 2, Berge, ;f1MB.n 2. Rkosky 2, Coxey. ovble plays Shepherd to Page to -Epertsonr Bere to Christiansen to Page. Innings pitched b" Sn-"r Sn-"r 7. Collins 2, lambson 7, Mor-H Mor-H l. Hits Off Shepherd 6, Ool- ns 3. Lambson 11. Struck out- By Shenherd 8, Collins 1. Lmb son 5. Bases on balls off Collin 3, Lambson 8, Moris 3. Hit with pitched -ball Christiansen and erge by tAmbson. Balk I ,nb-snri.. ,nb-snri.. Winning pitcher Sheplrd Tf he etcher ,' Trfimbson. im-rres im-rres Kidd and Ablett. Scorer; Christensen. -V. 1st usj fit? tp you iuum voun CAmjmFtGimtiG rnttA . KELf TOOB,COyOMniTi oi b 'at trT v."", Uausvto tmeMarv dririay. . Drive nadM 3S kImt ,' - TW,e" ?Scrf tilii.: lor U.ili SUriM W ImA , fAr "!; yj A 1 ' ? UTAU OIL REFINING COMfArA S X ATIONS AND DEALERS IN ITS PRODUCTS : t , vith a four-run lionising. Air b"" got two more tallies and pulled within one run of the Timps in he, eighth when Green homered for the. second time with Bryant on the paths ahead of him. ! Lanell Jackman, Provo. south-naw south-naw Just out of hiefa school, pitched for the-first time for the Timps and pretty well, scattered rhe 10 hits he gave the Air Base. Jackman did a bang-up job and was especially good in the clutches. Superlative work afield by the Tinlps saved Jackman several times. ';, " ,' Topnotch feature of the game, 1 farU was the alert Provo fielding. field-ing. The Timps made five double nlays. four of them; in-the first four innings. That's the most twm killings for one game most - fans car remember of r seeing made. i:PfrovoslIeadIng5 hitter -was Len-nie- Page " who- cracked out three hits' , In four " trips' to the plate, Including radoublei r t ' ' v The Sunday and Monday games parked the return of LaVa Kump tc' the Irovo rilneim.. KurtiriJ who liai been'r released i-'tfatofc-iSii S. at my 'after 'k session at ' officer's training, held down third base in the two games in fine fashion. - - In Monday's ohtest' Don . Overly.! Over-ly.! the ; classv. Tlmp catcher, played-second place in lieu . of ,Lee Christiansen, who .was' tinder the wAther, .Overly tujfned-.fn' a bang-1 bang-1 game, and showed once again ls -yersatiUty. Before.' the 'game was , over he had racked . up our nitoutr; and four assists. , He ..par-tlctpated- In three 'of the double plays, as V did Eerge, and - Page. r In V both games, Armand, g- irertsen 'handled . the catching job fUwlfssiy., .1 . .-' ... 1 - i '-f P 7 if 0 il Hlljj 1: If HI ''i! j ii iiu . wiinwruB iiiwinnn iim ihm mn r TT"ir "rmi i. .. .. . . wit i ' Churchill died a "bachelor .-.but. a wife in the old country claimed his property . . . and won! p. J it '-?t " CM The man who bought Churchill's property would have faced serious loss except for the fact that he had a Title Guarantee Policy Thirty yearn v a go. when .Churchill came"1 to the fatted Btatea, i he broke all former ties and lived un- ropcte1 - until; his death, a ar.Tbaohelor. Hl property a wold under thp temn ot. hI.y-lH and It wh not until Beverai years later that a' wlf from hU native land appeared and; claimed her . statutory rights In the uroperty." "V :,. ... . - It was clearly proved that-she' was Churchill's wife; although no one on . this side of the water knew of her existence. And, according to law; she became en titled to her dower Interest. ' :t-' Imagine the consternation of the 'new owner of the Church ill property! He was suddenly faced with taw- I suits nd possible loss Of title te the property which I I . - . " 4i . . . . m a . t ... . a. . . a ft ne naa purcnaaeo in gooa' xajin,' ance- even tmpruveu at considerable expense., Fortunately, he was protected by a Guarantee Policy. t'nder Its terms, the title was guaranteed even against such' unforfteen contingencies contin-gencies as" an unknowns Widow rin a T7lreign country.-The country.-The claim . paid in full wtthont cost ( to the new owner. '" T ' ' tr - t'nder the terms of -a, -Title Guarantee Policy, Intermountain Title ' Guaranty Company ssames fall reKponsibllity for defending the owner's title as gtianinteed, shoulders all legal expense, :r r v-.r; - and. In eaw f loi, PROMPTLY PATS lb In- , Mired p to the face of the pallry. r. No other form of title .pWe'cUon glvea , ynd such complete, security against loss !. and "worry. : - iMoriEJiaiMKiDiiJ-MirAnN Trnritia . liJAniiAjKr'irY ;cD)Imiipam 59 EAST CENTER STREeV . TELEPHONE 29 PROVO,.tJTAH - T" , ;Branch Manager : r L A R ON S; A N D R U S ''ry --Htlel'rotection - -7 that Guarantee ( ... i..anl dkjvnos HOME OFFICE t First National Bank Building Salt Xakc City.tltah ; '. "i -f jlV r:$- . |