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Show I. 16 SUNDAY HERALD I 4 EUTfDAY, JUNE 3, Utah Oxmtr. ' V . V - X - rotter up the rear. In addition to that, ner. Cyane, the Belmont Futurity we'll have Cyane and Cyrano, winner of, last fall, is going in the fresh faces, and Admiral's Voy- Garden State Park race. So are Roman Line, Vimy Ridge, Adage. ",: y V ,, The return meeting of the Der miral's Voyage and some more. There were excuses all along by and Preakness winners. De and Greek the alone line in the ' Preakness. " The . cidedly Money,' will make The Belmont worth the Belmont offers a fresh , deck. price of admission. The $100,000 There is the intriguing possibility Jersey Derby at a mile and .an that Tom Barry will win The Belfor the eighth May 30 could give the ' Bel. mont with a foreign-bre- d most another major stakes win third time in, five years. Barry : , - - ( - '- - - , t Sayfs: did it with the Irish-bre- d Cavan and Celtic Ash in 1958 and '60. His English-bre- d Vimy Ridge, ; which set an American turf record at Laurel was fourth in ..the Preak ness and closing ground, r From a breeding viewpoint. The Belmont is the most important leg ' of the Triple Crown. . see so .it is extraordinary; to a with chance and shooting many '. : for it- v ; SPARKLERS r .'T8Ss:i'rwr,-..- vr-- ffe . Good Crowds t - cca- - ' ; Quins Is the son of John Quinn, general manager of the Philadel phia PhUsf grandsdn of Bob Quinn, owner of the Boston Red before the" Tom Yawkey 'sx ' days. " The younger lad, however, traveled cn the family coattaHs. He's making it on his t . r .. cwn.. d for my Tve was two dad, says Jack. years with Davenport, la., i la the Midwest League; and two years with Midland, Tex la the Sophomore League. Both were Class "A C loops." ' f, " Quinn, of course, isn t the only one having success in 'the California League this year. Many thought the loop was. dead when major league ball came to San Francisco and Los Angeles. ' ' "But that's not true," says league president Eddie Mulligan. "Things haven't looked this well la the league since Just after ... . World War H." Ia fact. young Quinn credits the Giants for some of the success he is. having in San Jose. hasn't never.-worke- t flu.,. A lJwsy UPI Sports Writer YORK (UPI) It won't come as any surprise to aul Brown, although it may secretly aggravate the coach of the Cleveland Browns, that he is being readied today for his annual spot on the spot. Apparently it was inevitable, in view of the fact that Cleveland obtained Syracuse's Ernie Davis to go with crunching Jim Brown. n Anyhow, all of the grid will pick the Browns magazines to roll right over everything. They seemingly overlook a little matter named defense, even though it long has been proved in pro football that you can score all you want but youH go under if the other team scores more be cause of your weak defense. Possibly it's the price of success. but Brown, hasn't made the play offs the last four years. It has rumbles as to resulted in growing -whether he has slipped." Nothing was ever sillier. Stands on Record Brown can stand on his record completely unabashed, even his record of the last four years when as he favorite of the gridiron soothsayers he finished tied for first only to lose a playoff, twice second and a photo finish third last time cut.' pre-seaso- J J I' " f S " ATiSO V Tj-t-S - 'mi-TSi- e ".'''.' - it around contract tinie," he LIKES NEW ORLEANS NEW ORLEANS (UPI) Former Louisiana State star Billy Cannon says he would like o play forj. a pro football team in New Orleans, if this city ever gets ; a pro franchise. Gannon told newsmen at a banquet here Wednesday night he will become a free agent 'when his contract with the Houston Oilers of the American Football League expires at the end of the-- 1962 - First U.S. census report in 1790 consisted of a slim booklet of 56 re- nine-year-o- ld e again," i Evans, of course, went on to win the United States Open and - i old-tim- . Amateur in 1946, repeated as Amateur; king in 1920 and was runner-u- p three times. ' It was in the winter of 1901-0- 2 that Turpie, while teaching in Pasadena, Calif., listed among his pupils John D. Rockefeller Sr. "Rockefeller would take a half-holesson and we'd play nine holes," he recalls. "He would year." ur . r- old infielder. Wills emphasized, however, that Tve never stolen a base unless it had an important bearing on the game. I've never cried to steal when we iwere far out in front or far behind. I don't be lieve in stealing J f or the sake of Ju show-boating- ." Dairy Night Set I I I uerics rieia Sp.off' AjiDim He'll have his troubles this year because defensively the too, B?owns are on the thin side. He has two experienced linebackers in Galen Fiss and Vince Costello. But Walt Michaels retired and Brown had to give up Dave Lloyd to Detroit as part of the deal which got him quarterback Jim Nonowski for Milt Plum. If he can't deal for a front-lin-e linebacker, he has to be in difficulty because in the pro leagues you don't make it with rookies. One item on Brown's side is that the remainder of the league is jumbled, too. The Giants are a question mark, after their 37-- 0 playoff loss to Green Bay. Their problem is development of an offensive line. Philadelphia is in the same unprogressive ship. Others Also Hurt St. Louis Had a heap of injuries, Pittsburgh lacks the offensive power it seemingly will need, Dallas Is too young to make a big bid and Washington faces another rough season despite a good mm I wm. or r-- they can compete with him. His record proves what a chore that has been. Four Straight v Brown started in pro ball by winning four straight championships, all there: were, in the now defunct Conference. Stepping into the National League he took six straight division titles and three championships. He finished 'fourth in 195ft and won the division title again in '1957. As a pro coach, he has won 160 against 47 losses and seven ties. His overall mark, including games The annual Dairy Night at Derks, one of the biggest Salt Lake Bee promotions of the year, will be held on Frida, June 22, Dean Bateman said Saturday. Mr. Bateman is Salt Lake County county chairman for Utah's an nual observance of June Dairy Ameri- Month, sponsored by the . ttj a ; J can juairy Association qi uiau "People across the state, par ticularly in Utah county; are invited to attend,' Mr. Bateman said. at Ned Mr. Bateman said' Lake of the alt Winder, president Massil-loat Severn Prep of is been chamber commerce, Ohio High School appointed general chaj lan InU-Ohio State and Great Lakes charge of the 1962 Dairy fight at 290 is victories against 68 Derks, committee. 13 defeats and ties. It's apparent that he's really Automobile accidents caused slipping right into the football 1.35 million'" disabling injuries in the ' United States during 1959 history books. 1 ' (16-1-1- ); - : T when you pick his gift from n, Racing at Kiddieville Toy 4&& T t ma RACING COMPETITION EVER " Ford-Auro- . jnmmt r f ARROW DECTON New luxury in a wash and wear shirt. 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J ' and MOTOR COMPAM have joined forces for ' WE ARE ij C&Sm S A - V TO COME DOWN THE PIKE We stock a complete line of II Plu 'r r - c-7- 'J AND EVERY MONDAY NIGHT FOR 3 WEEKS It always pays to have things done RIGHT . . and it costs less if WE do it! 50 7f MONDAY NIGHT 7:00 TO 8:30 P.M. WATER PUMP? ACCESSORIES! " ' , "Who did yow say installed your ' GUARANTEED '! (15-5-- 2) PRODUCTS OF - ' (18-8-- 1) WE PICK UP - OR US ELESS ' . l HN,ftN' Af jfli j - SHIRT FASHIONS (81-7-2- ); 2 champions selected every week. Complete rules bnd details available at Kiddieville Toys. 2 'beau ifuj : trophies awarded to 2 finalists. ' ' TWO SMART -- . li if Ii ' All-Ameri- ca Brown's problem has been in finishing so high for so long that he has to sit on his hands 'during the annual ..draft until the cream has been skimmed off the top. That's .because the 'lowest teams get the first craft choices. Another unconsidered item is that coaching . has 'reached daz BURGESS PICKS KNICKS zling levels. Instead of Brown Bob Bur- "slipping" It's merely a case of NEW YORK (UPI) gess, former Marshall (W. Va.) the rest having built-u- p to where University star, Thursday became the third rookie to sign with the New York Knickerbockers of the ational Basketball Association. The Knlcks previously signed Paul Hogue - of - Cincinnati and By JOHN John Rudometkin of Southern TUNE-U- P - I might men ay-yea- MINOR; K , , have, his valet along with a pail of ice and a towel. John D. would dip the towel in the ice water and soothe his bald head. He'd pay the exact fee $1 for the lesson and $2 for the nine holes and tip his caddie a dime." In 1919, Turpie was referee for the most famous tournament in New Orleans. up to that time. Bobby Jones was in the Crescent City as a boy wonder seeking to retain his Southern championship! Jones, he recalls, "had tremendous touch and rhythm even then." It was in the qualifying round that Jones made his famous shoe shot. Bobby's shot off the first tee bounded off the green and into a discarded shoe,' Turpie remembers, "They called me- for a ruling. Unde"r the rules then, he wasn't entitled to liftl He took his niblick and pitched shoe and ball onto the green." The powej? golf of today and ' the spectacular achievements of the likes of Arnold Palmer have failed to cool Turpie toward the e giants "Vardon, Janes and,Hagen these men were craftsmen," says George Turpie. "They played with no more than ittjie clubs, crude implements compared to the'matched sets of today, rimow; most people will think I'm anold fogey, but the players today ari more robots than craftsmen. They play every week and get to be mechanical. "In the old days you had only three or four tournaments a , -- if j Newspaper Enterprise Assn. NEW ORLEANS (NEA) George Turpie caddied for Harry Vardon when the British Master won his first British Open-H- e flipped a coin that may have determined the destiny of Chick ' '.' 1 Evans; He gave golf lessons to John D. Rockefeller Sr. He refereedj. the 1919 Southern Amateur when Bobby Jones made one of . his most talked? about shots. Turpie- Is another example of that recipe for long life golf and fresh air. The snowy-haire- d Scot, born a few blocks from St, Andrews, celebrated his 82nd birthday collecting tickets at the soft drink stand at St. John Golf Course in New Orleans. ., Turpie, the son of a shoemaker at St. Andrews in his four brothers and had spare time, four sisters, all golfers. He caddied during his grammer school days and at 15 reached his first for Vardon milestone: He caddied when he won his ' first British Open in 1895. Vardon's' hands were so big "he actually was ashamed to put them on the table when he was eating." 4" Turpie crossed the Atlantic in 1898 to assist brother Harry head professional at the Edgewater Country Club, near Chicago. It was there that Chick Evans got his start as a caddie under George who often wonders what "would have happened to Evans if a coin toss hadn't come up heads. "He and another caddie, who was every bit; as good a golfer as Evans, were always fighting' old GeorgenrecaHs with a twinkle. "I warned them if it didn't stop, one of them wquldi-havto go. They did it again, and I tossed a coin to see who would leave. Evans won. The other caddie left the course and I never heard; of him who wprked Hac hppn ffvpn t.hp in1 Willc v ff nuu okay by manager Walt Alston to steal when he feels like it. "They're playing my t y p e of game," grinned thewiryj , The Bees are averaging 1,533 per fame through their first 12 t&ts and if that .rate keeps up the club could attract 87,000 customers for the season. mI understand the average attendance last year 'in the league was about 23,000 per team,- says Quinn. "If we can keep this up we should top that by about 60,- - 60 By PETER FINNEY said with a smile. In His Favor pages; recent census reports Wills has a lot in his favor this quire more than 130,000 pages. season. The Dodgers ard not a power hitting team. Their new home ball park is not tailored for long ball hittfog. They have to score runs one at a time, on sin- - NEW ss homers. P Takes Too Much "I don't think 1 can keep up this pace,"i Wills said. "As (the season wears on and the ' weather becomes hotter, I won't be able to steal this much. It .takes too much out of you." j . Someone chimed in, ,. "And you won't be running againsjt the Mets all season long, either." Wills has' stolen '' seven q - his bases against the Mets, - whose catchers have thrown out only 11 runners in v ,44 r base - stealing atr, tempts this season. To the Dodgers' mercuria , shortstop, once rejected by the Detroit Tigers, base stealing is an art and a joy, Wills is fully aware of the old baseball adage that "homfe run hitters fide in Cadillacs, bit he's serious about raising base steal ing to the. level of where if could earn him enough to buy a! fancy Ruth's tion" By OSCAR FRALEY j base-stealin- worth while so that Paul IBirowini's ; -- car too. "Id like to make it sufficiently Horses (Determine and Tomy Lee) have been shipped back to California after bagging the Derby, their owners wholly disinter ested in the Triple Crown. A num ber of colts break: down trying to get to the Derby, or between the Louisville rodeo and The Belmont. For these and other reasons, the field in the $125,000 added Belmont often is small. , ''Looks like we may have a dozen or close to it this trip," said Trotter, feet up on his desk. With the exception of Ridan, the owners of which elected to go to tChlcago, we will have serven of the first eight in the Preakness, plus Jaipur and Prego, which brought well-know- II that man Maury Wills isn't arrested v soon, jhe'll steal Ty Cobb's record of 9S in one season set in 1915. little Maury laugbjed, though, when someone pointed that out to him. To the modern ballplayer. g record is Cobb's even- - farther out of reach than I $100,000.! By HAL WOOD UPI Sports Writer SAN JOSE. Calif. (UPI) Young Jade Quinn Jr., a chip off basen ball's Quins block, is the sensation of minor league basebalL In an era of tumbling minor league attendance. folding baseball elubs and fewer minor leagues, Quinn is a magician doing box , office busl-cein the shadow of the San Francisco Giants. The young executive Is general manager of the San Jose Bees of the California (Class C) League With his club operating about 40 miles south of Candlestick Park, that- - thief! 163-pou- nd , Proves Top By NORMAN MILLER UPI Sports Writer NEW YORK (UPI) Sfop , , Jack Quinn Goiters Mow More Robots I hah Craftsmen Turpie Threaten Tys Record 1 t Vardoh to Palmer Wills May - - Olds Ra ce o.eiiinnioini'ii , Utah for OSu By HARRY GRAYSON r Newspaper Enterprise . Sports Editor NEW YORK (NEA) Executive offices under the clubhouse sec tion of the huge Aqueduct stands are so lush that they look like the loan department of a modernized : bank. - t ; . Tommy Trotter's headquarters, la the rear and looking Tout on the entrance gates. is utilitarian by comparison. Trotter is the racing secretary and official handicap- per of ail New York tracks, and , horsemen walk in and 'out.' Trotter, tall and handsome and seemingly young for his wide experience and great responsibility, was saying how fortunate it was Belmont at Belmont . for The June 9, that the Kentucky Park, turned out and Preakness Derby did. ..the way,: they .This is going to be a big Bel mont commented Trotter. "It be the true test of the will really V Usually by the time of The Bel mont the dock wallopers have been separated from the ribbon clerks. A stickout sophomore such as Whirlaway, Count Fleet, Assault, Citation, Native Dancer or Nashua frightens off the owners of the others. After the Derby and Preakness, the proprietors and trainers tire of chasing the leaders, in cases such as these, the owners who run colts in The Belmont. at a mile and a half ex pect little more than a share of what is left after the winning horseman picks up more than ;." Plenty of Free Parking IK1AILIIS L DO n YOURSELF SAVE HALF and Aslifcn Hertz Rentals CALL PR W9 SINCLAIR SERVICE FR 3-94- 272 N. University Avenue 237 South University - Provo J FATHER'S DAY IS JUNE 17th 17 , u. A V -- l v. |