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Show l f,- f - - - I oar n r A- - n ii .- - . t .Aft I" If Jfcf tj ,. , n ,, ' . , .... iintinr- ' liiiiiMi , . ti'ji Major LcQciuo Acron'5-4- ' B raves n iiimiifir In FimiGls 8-- 2; By HARRY GRAYSON NEA Sports Editc "'.. By HAL WOOD NEW YORK (NEA) The Yankees have been fright-full- y United "Press International disappointing; to, Casey: Stengel since the All-StSAN FRANCISCO (UPD ImGame, but the bid professor has been around long enough a PROVO, to discount problems after letting off one good blast of perturbable all Charley Coe, o an week but scrambler ' a" j ; steam. when the chips were. Don Larsen. are down,gambler bad arms of Whitey: The Ford and won his second National .c V' n iij.-ii;.. wun ai cause ior cuucera, idui cnamng. wie millionaire man- - ' AmatwiV 'rhamninnsiiW st. is more perturbed-abou- t the urday. as he,., crushed Tom-ager you get the idea that he ... . upstart i n:n nr.T nr .Uv tvi xn iacK lviuuse tne of Aaron , oi my. Gainesville, Ga., tjii avicjuugam, pan anting' in the finals of the tourna Skowron, Jerry ;Lumpe and Tony Kubek. " The Braves admittedly will have a bulge in pitching in ment. 'V"':''t:.: and when oftn Calm, cautious, as 'World Series it's the but, Stengel points out, quality; his tee iron erratic, shots and lon'g that wins in a set of seven games; or less, not quantity' In him Coe got: watched trouble, "I read where, with Fordiand LarsenNut, I'd be des- zi--y ear-ol-d 1 I ar ' old-pr- - . . ',.'! ' ' a. rif . .!.! 5 5-- 4, ; v ' , v.u.-rx- p j. the wWofoxro a4-o4-- n iQt-ry- tkat is," he says. "Well, how many pitchers did Milwaukee . n fn win a vmt ncm? Jnst. onewasnt it? AP-r- J 4 of .University i Pntti Thr . ioth No one will ever forget Lew Burdette's three complete Two. up after 18 holes Saturday turns and '24 :scoreless innincrs aeainst the: American morning, Coe d the , saw 19th and his . green League champions. advantage "That's what I'll be looking for," says Stengel, "a hot dwindle to one - up. He won rthe 20th; lost the 21st when he hit pitcher or two in the "World Senes ' '' three-putte- . - , , a trap. v 5 , , "But I wasn't worried," he said. knew my game, had rewith the pitcher putting his stuff where he wanted it has turned.'"IFor 11 holes this capped the Series the Cardinals wih Dizzy Dean and I was all over the lot. Butmorning on the Brecheen, the Yankees with Allie Reynolds, the 12th hole I started hitting straight Harry "" Dodgers with Johnny Podres and so on down the line. and my shots were true. Note; Bob Turley could do the job for the New that I was one under par for six Strong-ari DOWN TltROUGH THE YEARS the club, coming up - . . ' ! 5 I I I m .' a '..York club this trip. holes on the middle part of the The two days off for traveling provided the Series afternoon round." . .. more than five games makes the pitcher on his game This type of golf may have f goes " missed out against Aaron Friday evenr more valuable. Burdette started three times last fall when f despite the fact that he did noti make the first one until shot athe Southeastern champion 67. But ' the second game. ;:! the pressure told. SudsviUe brought up the phenomenal youngsters, Saturday I ': All Day Long Joey Jay, Carlton Willey and Juan Pizarro, to' give the Tough Tommy was in trouble l veterans, Warren' Spahn; Burdette and Bob Rush, suffi- - all day long. Even on the practice cient fipace between outings arid take up the slack when tee before 'play started, the per i Bob Buhl's arm went on the bum. When Buhl's arm wast sonable Southeastern Amateur rf mended, Fred Haney had so many front-lin- e pitchers that champion, was hooking his shots a sure sign that he was feeling he found it difficult to spot the f ireballer in the order." the tension that comes with r r THE KIND OF PITCHER Stengel is looking for championship, competition. And when he took to the course i frankly, is another Burdette. Among the few things Casey was the same way. , never got over was the Yankees dealing Selva. Lewis Bur-- I it "But I was okay going into the Odette Jr., to the Boston Braves with $50,000 for Johnny 22nd hole he only Sain, Aug. 29, 1951. It was Johnny Moore, an obcure' scout, said. "Then everything went 1 who told John jQuinn general manager of the Braves, to wrong.' ' '.''.,;!.' ';. j insist'on" Burdette, then with a rather mediocre record as That's where' Coe won five conii'a San Francisco Seal. The. same Moore 'found?. Eddie Math- - secutive holes, one with a birdie j n ews and Del Crandall. It galls9 Stengel to be reminded that four with pars, to ice the match Burdette sat in the Yankee dugout, for weeks getting no as he drew ' j ; ; - . . ar three-under-p- ; i : ; :. ' I -- . . ! one-4own- ," " 6-u- attention. ; ;v , "That feller," he says, "developed himself into quite V." .x- -' ' v Fa pitcher." .; J. ';''' Burdette is at once awarded World Series stature be- cause he ups when the money is on the table. Throwing I generally from !a three-quartdelivery, he has a multiple of moves and deliveries. He fidgets around, upsetting the batter and keeping, him off balance, fakes spitting on the ball 'and whatnot. But the basic reason for his success is 4 that he keens a sinker low. Even Mickev Mantle doesn't swat that pitch but of the park. Lew Burdette has the delicate touch in the art' of ; pitching. ,:', . i ' " ' j I I i National League j ...w...... Milwaukee Pet: .599 .545 .517 .486 .486 .465 .465 .437 .85 Pittsburgh .......... .78 74 San Francisco 65 69 74 72 76 76 80 . - HairaH Waimtt Adk ; Legal Notices Consult County Clert or tn ResDective Signers tor rur-th- er (13-11-).J mformation Probate and Guardianship Notices NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS j li Sealed proposals will be re ceived at this office until 2 o'clock p.m.; Sept. 22, 1958, . for construct ing! two aprons, aiitp parking area Wor-thingt- on 1 and graded area; for lighting NWWE Runway and Taxiway of the Provo Municipal Airport at Pro vo, Utah. Bids will be .opened on or about this ; time by the City Manage of. Provo, Utan ; 2.' All bids must be addressed .. as follows:, Office of the ,City Manager, MANAGER OF PROVO, UTAH. Provo, Utah. - -- i ? ( : . Contractor's- - Bid E. EARL UDALL, . , F.A.A.P. No. i 3. The work consists essentially . of 3064 cu.yds unclassified exca- 6260 .cut yds subbase vatioa; ' 1912 cu course, lyds aggregate base course, 3700 gallons bitumin 1500 , tons Ous j prime coat MC-bituminous surface course (cfa- - trali plant hot" mix?,' 90 tons bv tuminous material (asphalt), 800 lin ft 4' chain link fenceL 800 lin ft 3" double run concrete encased, bituminous fiber duct, 3 each entrance-exi- t (signs, 66 each elevated marker lights clear, .16 each threshold lights green, 120 elevated i taxiway lights x blue, 31,000 lin ft of cable trench,. 7000 lin ft' of underground cable in duct, 1c No. 8 3000 v., 41,000 lin ft underground cable in trench No. 8 1c 3000 . V. lump sum power supply and equipment in vrultf lump sum remove '.existing equip-- City Manager. j j ki (0-1- j - -- ,i? irst publication: Sept 7, Last publication: Sept. 14, 1958. 1958. SAXJE September 3. nynus.rursuam to aumorixy contain"jo. ed in Section 6331, Internal Revenue wae UTAIf 1, s ( er 20-ga- er i 4-- 1, "five." Gano Installed As, President Of Bowling Group Utah Amateur ), , 3, ' A . -- j : , -- me . me 9-- - I they concentrate on (6-5- ). 1 (14-14- WESTEDS Washington ..340 000 010--8 12 1 0 Kansas City. .100 202 000 5 10 ' and Ramos (9) Valentinetti, Courtney; Johnson (1), Reed (4), Daley (5), Gorman (7) and Chiti. ) WP Valentinetti LP UrHRS Tuttle (9th), ban Courtney (8th), Demaestri (6tfi), Zauchin (15th). " L FIVE (5-4- (8-1-1). FRIDAY'S RESULTS National League San Francisco 5,. Phillies 2 San Francisco 19, Phillies 2 Los Angeles 7, Pittsburgh 3 Chicago 7, Cincinnati 5 Milwaukee 6, St. Louis 0 American League New York- 5, Chicago 0 Kansas City 4, Washington 3 Cleveland-5Boston 4 Detroit 3, Baltimore 1 PROBABLE PITCHERS TODAY American League . Washington at Chicago (2) ,- - tailored by Clothcrafr FRESNO STATE , 4 $55 . V - Yj . . t. '. . Griggs "and (3-i- l) . Kemmerer . STATE J 3 ' " - 1 (9-8- 7) (10-U- ). 6) v f ( ' (8-9- ). 0) vSSl NORTH TEXAS Wil- (16-1- 0) (6-1-4) : UTAH vs. Pierce and son New York at Kansas City , (2) vs. and Maas Ford (14-) and Terry Grim (6-Boston at Detroit (2' games) (11-1000 10 2 SulUvan (11-8- ) and Brewer 0002 Chicago .....101 ' (12-1OOx .341 100 0 15 Cincinnati . . 9 and Hoef t vSi Foytack ). Briggs, Soils (1), Buzhardt (2), Hobble v(6), Henry (8) and Nee-Baltimore at Cleveland . (2) and- Johnson ) and Bailey. Portocarrero (13-1man; Kellner ). (7-LP Briggs and HRS Robin- (6-Mossie vsv son v(29th), Banks (46th), Lynch j National League (14th).:.. San Francisco at Cincinnati (5-American League and Mon-za(2 games r. (16-1(6-001 000 0001 7 Boston vs. Purkey and Cleveland . . .000 010 30x 4 7 Newcombe ). Sisler,; Byerly (7) and White: Chicago at Pittsburgh (2) McLish (15-and Nixon. LP Anderson (2-and Hillman f (4-Sisler (8-- ) . HR Buddin (11th). vs. Friend and Raydon (12-12- The Pittsburgh Pirates tied two records . while beating the Los Dick Angeles Dodgers, ' one mark Stuart,, equalled by striking out six straight times, including four times last night, while Bill Mazeroski's two-ru- n homer in the fourth Inning was his 18th of the year and tied the high total for all Pittsburgh-seconbasemen. Ralph Mauriello, making his major league pitching debut for the Dodgers, failed to survive the first inning as Pittsburgh routed him with three runs. The' Pirates added a pair of two-ru- n clusters in the third and fourth off reliever Babe Birrer. Vera Law worked five innings for Pittsburgh and was credited with his 13th win. Bob Porterfield hed the Dodgers hltless over the' last four innings. Drives In Four Frank Robinson drove in four runs with 'a homer and a double in the first two Innings to help the Cincinnati Redlegs snap a four-galosing streak with a 2 V triumph over the Chicago v Cubs. . ; Entries Open For Central 1 , 1 Dogs Know a Phony When They See It I 9-j- 4. " i r i 1-- MEXICO NEVV 1 J 0) 2) WYOMING (8-9- (6-3- 1) (5-4- ! I) - Fer-rare- se 8) 8) (2-4)- .. (" -- SEAS0M;; : , - )-- nt 7) 0) 9) j TICKETS J . (6-12- - ' ) ,f.' 1' . f 7) 1) 7) 20-1- 3) 4). . ( f - - 3) , 2) T . " ' ; . - , i 1 ' SEASC:3 and IIIDIVIDUAL TICKETS ' ' V- - ' r:ou.o:isAL!: " DYU TICKGT . L-- , ; ctwayt bett to bet en qvaVdy. AjhJ thafs why' cur Herftc; Wortftd Sulti strefs quality In very respect! Fcbrics, tailoring, v : 00 "'. ...... ... (9-1-2). 1) : j 8-2- ,x 4--2 tne oi described has been louowing seized for propertyi04, ment of. delinquent revenuenonpaytaxes due from Orem Paint Company Incorporated, 797 North State St, Orem. Utah. The will be sold in accordanceproperty with the provisions of Section 6335, Internal Revenue Code of 1954, and regula tions - promulgated thereunder, at public auction on the" 15th day" of ihsb at 10:00 a.m. seniemDer, o'clock, at 797 North State St-- Orem. Utah. Description of .nronertv: All (8-y items of inventory of Orem Paint 000 100 Baltimore 2 6 2 ...100 St. Louis at .Philadelphia-Jo- nes Company: Incorporated including Furniture and Fixtures. A partial Detroit . . . . .207 040 OOx 13 16 0 (12-1vs. Sanford list of inventory Is as follows: ApWalker Los Brown, Lehman. at Milwaukee 581 cans (2), assorted of Angeles proximately paint. All Furniture and Fixtures; (3) , Beamon (3) and Triandos, Drysdale (11-1vs. Buhl (5-- . assorted brushes, wallpaper, drapery samples .and other allied products. also includes one (1) only Inventory 1948 Buick Sedan. The property will be offered for sale. For itemized list of inventory call FR Provo; utan. to be sold in groups or in the the right, title, and aggregate, Orem Paint interest of only Company in corporated in and to the property galvanized conduit duct jacked will be offered for sale. The terms of hpayment will be Cash, certified. under taxiway. cashier's or treasurer's check. Charles . All work I. Fox, District Director of Internal jhall comply with the Revenue. By Bobby M. Talbot. Civil Aeronautics Administration Revenue Officer. " standards. AFTEH jFOHE . 4i Proposal Guaranty: Each bid be shall) CSE THE PUUUV LLL.i 67 ON C.B.S-T."accompanied xby cash, bid bond or certified check, made SATUHDAYS S:Z3 P.M. CHANNEL 5 ' Eisctrls Shaver Cpeclxiist payable to the City Treasurer, in SALES ,0 niPAIHS ACE & JERRY'S AUTO GLASS ait amount equal to at least five SMALL fHAVERS Provo's Only Acta Glass APPLIANCES CLIPPERS per cent (5X of the amount of ' 2nd West ProT tio. Authorized "The Arent Glass Without Distortion said bid, and no bid; shall be 1 V7eri NcrCi rrav FQ considered unless such cash, bid 1, By United Press International Warren Spahn, of the Mil waukee Braves moved into a when he special class by himself 'N left4ianded became the first pitcher in baseball history Nto win 20 "games m nine different sea sons by defeating the. St. Louis t Cardinals, Saturday. Spahn's nineiit triumph over St Louis put him ahead of Eddie Plank and Lefty Grove of the Philadelphia. Athletics, each . of whom won 20 games eight times. Right-handCy Youngx holds the major league record Vith 16 seasons separate Make It Easy Milwaukee made it easy for. Spahn by scoring five unearned runs in the fourth inning on three hits and three St Louis errors, two of them by 'second baseman Don Blasingame. Larry Jackson suffered the loss that helped the Braves reduce 'their pennant number to clinchingj magic suffering 0) L-5- 7 ...70 Cincinnati . St. Louis ...68. Los ....66 gelcs Chicago . ..i .........66 . 62 Ehiladelphia American League New York '. .. . . . . ... . .87 55 .613 I... .......74 67 .525 Chicago 70 70 ,500 Boston Detroit ..... .. ....... .69 71 .493 Cleveland .v. ......... 69 72 .489 Kansas City ......... GI 74 .471 ....61 80 .433 Washington' SATURDAY'S RESULTS National League Los Angeles 010 030 0004 9 2 Pittsburgh ..302 220 OOx 9 13 1 Mauriello, Birrer (1), Bessent (4); Koufax (5)", Erskine (6) and bond or certified check is enclosed Roseboro; Law, Porterfield' (6) and Kravitz. WP Law therewith. ). HR Mazer-osMauriello LP 5. Contract time: All work shall (18th). be completed in 45 working days. 6; ' Plans and Specifications San Fran. .. .000 000 0516 12 1 Copies of the, contract documents, Philadelphia 010 001 1115 14 1 pians ana specmcauons are on McCormick, G. Jones (6); file at this office and at the office Johnson (8) and of Neff Engineering and Con Schmidt;! (;(8), Farrell (8), struction Co., 2500 Evergreen Erickson Morehead, (9) and Lopata. WP Ave., Salt . Lake City, Utah, and G. Jones (3--1. LP Morehead are ' open to public inspection. A a-6(13tli), HRS Kirkland set of such documents may be H. Anderson obtained upon a deposit of $10.00 Rodgers ' (1st), which , will be forfeited unless, a (23rd). bona fide bid ismade and plans St. Louis ....000 002 0002' 9 S and specifications are returned in MUwaukee . .000 500 03x S 10 1 good condition within (5) five days Jackson Chittum (5), W. Smith ater bids are opened. and (7) and Green; Spahn (20-1BY ORDER OF THE CITY Rice. LP Jackson ). , Gil McDougald, through one of his worst seasons, assured the New York Yankees UTAH COUNTY, 1958 SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER at least a tie for the American League Pennant Saturday when he hit a three-ru-n homer In the eighth inning that sunk the Chicago White Sox, 54. McDougald's homer, struck off loser Early Wynn, overcame a Chicago lead and reduced the Yank c e ' pennant - clinching "magic number" to one. :' Near Title Wrap-u- p That means they can wrap up their ninth pennant In . the last 10 years by. winning one game in a double-headagainst Kansas City Sunday. One loss by the White Sox in a twin-bi- ll against Washington will have ' the .same v:lv effect. Cal McLish of Cleveland turned in his 15th victory of the year when he beat Boston, with a seven-h-it effort. The only run MoLish gave up was a fourth-inning homer by Don Buddin. The Indians broke a 1 tie with off runs Dave Sisler in the three seventh. Vic Power doubled home two of the runs. itfTifirriftrf" Ted Williams moved, ahead of teammate Pete Runnels in the race for the A. L. batting crown THE SLIDE THA FAILED Dick Gernert of the Boston Red Sox is out at the a single in three trips while with plate as Russ Nixon, Indians' catcher,? tags him, Gernert tried to score on a fly was blanked in four Runnels ball to rightfield hy Sammy White, but Rocky Colavito threw him. out. The Wililams tries. average I J320 Sox game Saturday in Cleveland. action came in the second inning of Jndians-Re- d .318. . at and Runnels is ; (Herald-UP- I v Telephoto). The Detroit Tigers rallied for seven runs in the third inning r and went on to whip the slump- ridden Baltimore Orioles, 12-behind Jim Bunning's r six-h- it pitching. Detroit's first eight batters all Someone LONDON (UPI) hit safely in the third inning. The A.L. record for consecutive hits threw a phony rabbit onto the SALT LAKE CITY (UPD Cer- Is M0 Iset by Boston in 1901 Gail Harringay. dog racing track , Friemonies officially installing Dick Harris drove in four of Detroit's Prizestotaling. $700 minimum Gano of Salt Lake City as presi- runs with a pair of homers and day night as the dogs were 30 have bep posted for the Central dent of the American Bowling a yards from the finish line. single. Skinny Brown was the Af&ateur gjolf tournament Congress were held Saturday at vNone of them turned away from Utah loser.' scheduledSfpr Sept. 27 and 28 at the Hotel Utah. Clint Courtney's the mechanical rabbit they" were the Timpanogos Golf Club in grandslam Gano, the first Utahn to achieve homer m the second inning pownot even the . favorite Provo. chasing, the presidency of the ABC, was ered to an 85 Washington victory ' An added purse .is offered in a elected at the organization's last over Kansas winner, Please Look, City and helped Pro-ANew convention in round York. 26, special Sept. Athletics' winsnap a with, one-ha-lf handicap (limit 9 streak. all entrants must have a certi- ning strokes) in effect. Ten prizes are offered ama- fied handicap; The ' full handicap teurs for the best gross scores, will be allowed with a maximum and ranging' from $75 certificates for of 22 strokes. Zupo (5) ; Bunning (12-1Wilson, Feller '(9), LP Brown first down to $10 certificates for Entries should be mailed to HRS-iBo- yd (7th), Harris 2 lOth place. Identical prizes are Bill Johnson, Timp course pro(17th and 18th), Oertel (1st). offered for the best net scores. fessional, Box 262, Provo. Pair- Entry fee is $7 per player, and ings will be made up Sept. 25. New York ...100 000 130--5 10 1 8 0 002 011 000--4 Chicago v Shantz, Dickson (7), Duren (9) and Howard; Wynn, Rudolph (9) and Battey. WP 'Dickson (10-7- ). ). LP Wynn HRMcDoug-al-d (13th). Baseball Scoreboard er I Yanks Top Sa: six-ga- j I Dafeai-&ird-s m . ; 6 : p. " V Rcund-U- p - i.,i.,...i,,v,...y..J..n.i Mi "i i . mm Qo fT(g)i!Jim SlOlfilQulV 2 Wins Oyer m . . . Vi AT CHCG ' styling! All ot a price that makes thern phencTRenal valoel Come see them rts!!y " the Vi w!:h a heritc;e of quatityl . tttpzz, cvl;J tMpis, th v?ry-n- w "spcrkle-loc- k Chare in Pay . li monthly ' V '' j Lftby-Owena-Fc- , li 2J rd ; : rtca Z-Z- Gcorn Albert Smilh Fioldhouso, 9" a.b. to' S;p.n. Provo' H f da 'v. ft s , t I J ', |