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Show J THE SALT LAKE T1UBILNE, MONDAY .MOHNIM), r A. C.j Michigan Earl ndl- - cky two with ssed two , fol- - 20 lalf- - - 70r -' Doth- 20 18 18 16 J r. 6 6(- - 6 6 6 2 ce an and , J The rity. OUt the won the not ack. ve a was 4 Grinnell, Hays Missouri Stand r ' SVWTNo fJil mISk jIm It V YEAres of WON BOBST H mKwk 2 TKf m Mi (J Aoe, 4- AT - British opt T"'C- the TMt Twice amo Trie American ,4Mitofl w Out at in Fortunate Saturday. Hamp-den-Stdne- y; 21-a- ll. Roberti Unable To Enter Bout "five-innin- X-r- le xasual-spectatoT- Syndi- -' ) NEW YORK, Oct. 1 Reeling off four victories In a row, Drexel leads eastern colleges In football's won and lost column, but high scoring honors thus far belong to Georgetown, which has played but three games and won them all. Georgetown's fifty-tw- o points against Lebanon Valley on Saturday raised the Washington institution's total for the season to 171. Lafayette, leader a week ago. scored twenty-eigpoints against George Washington for a season's total of 162. Third place In scoring Is held by Pennsylvania with 147. Neither Georgetown. Lafayette nor Penn has been scored upon. ! Carnegie Tech. with 142: Dartmouth, with 120. and Syracuse, with 104. complete the list of colleges with point totals over the century mark. The records of eastern colleges that have scored more than seventy-fiv- e points follows: D. 1828. ht PROBATE AND GUARDIANSHIP HOT1CE8 (Consult county clerk or tbe rcipectiT tiffo. r Jot fnrthrr nfnmitwti IN THE DISTRICT COL'RT OV THE Third Judicial district. In and for the State of Utah. County of Salt lederal Intermediate Credit Bank of a ;okane, Corporation. Plaintiff, vs. Kasteca Livestock I .can Company, a Notlc to Corporation, Defendant. Creditors. Notice is hereby given to all persons, firms, association am corporations, having claims or demands against Western Livestock Loan Company, a corporation, to presentin nd :Ve their claims and demands, writing, duly verified by afidavit, together with the amount and nature of an security or lien held by the claimant to which he may deem himself entitled, and setting forth any priority he may claim, as sucb rewith the undersigned ceiver, at it place of business, New bouse Building, In Salt Lake City, on or before November 10. 128. Dated this 20th day of September, tJ8. BANKERS TRI'ST COMPANY, As Receiver for Western Livestock I- - ) V IK BTATsM MACHINE COMPANY. By T. B. Staaraa. President. 4 Otorselawn. 3 Llfsrette I Pennsylvania Csrnede Tech Dartmouth Syracuse 2 i ....... .3 3 3 3 Holy Cross Army Darti and New York Columbia M lira iH alHlKBS. I 'Continued on Following- Pars a. flg-ur- ed ht S3 EBhBBIH 8JBjBJBHVBR8V48VHHIaV1V80VVViVVVVVVHPMV(vOT 0srasaMHHMsMJVBO3w BBBsrssssMt' team competition Saturday at Port Douglas. The tournament closed the competitive play at the post links for the season and the occasion was celebrated with a banquet given to the Team Tilt. winners by the losers si the hotel. However, club members may InIn one of the closest combats In dulge in the sport at the post as long years, the Blues managed to nose as the weather permits, according to out the Reds. 35 to 29. in the annual Tom McHugh, club professional. Blues Are Victors in Annual Fort Douglas New-hou- se JACKIE ANDREWS PITS RING SKILL AGAINST COAST BOXER AT ARENA Art Draws TjrTcaPtight weighT" for Feature .Monday. jm&lfiBffi'simr" Directors' Cup Meet Ul Ogden Special to The Tribune. OGDEN W. B. Felt defeat- eraflterr up during the last two weeks over a couple of Salt Lake's leading fistic lights, Paul Hardy and Adrian Elton, Art Pal-- I Wltfi r victories ed Mark Murphy, 2 and 1, In the final of the Ogden Golf and Country club directors' cup on the local links Sunday. In spite of the nippy weather, both golfers shot consistent golf throughout the scheduled match. inter-mounta- in le TIMS' S m 8EAB ....... Felt Captures Palmer of Los Angeles SHIMMER HIE LAKE Mil T&W sW mm Ugsj . . . .3 3 3 w i 3 L. T Op. Pts 0 3 . 0 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 0 0 n n It m 11 147 143 120 104 0 0 0 0 0 3 U (1 It four-roun- y e. iii four-roun- ay seventy-five-hot- rr Old-tim- fl 1 2-- . .sP 2S .f I t glf NeC I ST teatlsasassssw' r.w.f.V' aTZ iBsssssT 1W WTjI ..minimi,. lilt '"'iiitils dlmlmmMmmmwWm " w mmmmmmt 1 11 - - mmlmmmm II IiI i liliil I ' four-rouner III Matches Postponed at Nibley Park r le o Drexel Loan Company. By John K Hardy, Vice President. Kablan St Clendenin, Attorneys for th Receiver. 1 STOCKHULOEKs' afeLTINU. Notice Is hereby giren that a special meeting of tbe stockholders of Western States Machine company, a Utah corporation. Is hereby called and will be held in the directors' room metmnine floor. Deaeret Bank building Salt Lake City. Utah, on Wednesday, the 24th day rf October 1S3S. at tha boor of .10 clock a. m. The meeting is called-b- y the president 'or th purpose of electing dtrecvir ap- of dtrec- and act the mlDtitas proving tors and for the consideration of all be matters that other may presented n. Nlel-son.a- By CHARLES W. DUNKLEY. Associated Press Sport Writer. P). CHICAGO, 111.. Oct. 14 Emerging victorious in opening battles involving the western conference Minnesota. gridiron championship, Indiana, Ohio State and Iowa are brewing poison for other title contenders, Judging from performance in the Initial comoats yesterday. A better lineup of Indiana's strength will be available next Saturday when the Hoosiers battle Illinois, defending champion, at Wisconsin will take on Purdue at Lafayette. These two contest will be the outstanding attractions, involving championship rating. Michigan, Ohio Mate Battle at Columbus. The other Big Ten games on the schedule bring together Michigan and Ohio State in one of their "traditional" affairs at Columbus, with Chicago tangling with the rough Minnesota boys at Minneapolis. Northwestern and Iowa will take time out from conference activity. The Purple eleven will take the field against Kentucky at Evanston, while Rob-bin- NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate of Leopold L. Baumgarten Deceased. Creditors Will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 1008 K corns building (136. South Main street), Salt Lake Cltv. Utah, on or before the 20th day of December. A. D. 1928. JOSEPH BAUMGARTEN Executor of the Will of Leopold L. Baumgarten. Deceased. Date of first publication. October IS, A. -0 mer. flashy Los Angeles boxer, will continue his campaign against the local talent Monday night when he meets Jackie Andrews, premier lightweight, in the main even t pLthe weekly Manhattan club card at McCullough's arena. Andrews' ability as a boxer and a puncher has been a CREATES fact hereabouts for several seasons, and Palmer's two previous showings have indicated that he Is a logical match for the popular Salt E RECORD Laker. Bobby Mason, another Los Angeles boy, is matched with the hardhitting Roy Hawkins of Ogden In the semiwindup of the evening, which is Former Navy Boy Remains in Fall, Heaviest in Years, Up- scheduled for four rounds. Mason Water Sixty-Fiv- e Hours, has fought a number of good bouts s, his victim last being Pasty Two Minutes. sets Power and Traffic and here, the rugged battler from Port Douglas. Hawkins has never graced Delays Threshing. the local ring, but he. has made LOS ANGELES. Oct. 14 (IP). The great showing in Ogden against Jess world's endurance swimming record, Hobson and Kid Irish, and he will no doubt give the coast battler a long the property of women paddlers, Special to The Tribune. MONTPEL1ER. Idaho. The snow tussle. today was broken by a man, Jimmy d The main preliminary who storm that began Thursday morning is another bout of headline caliber Cherry, former navy swimmer, and continued vith more or with Jack Carroll of Salt Lake bat- remained in an outdoor pool here for more than 48 hours has tling Otto Van, elongated Ogden sixty-fiv- e hours and two minutes. left this section covered with from fireman. Carroll was one of the Entering the water at the Bimlnl one to two feet of snow. In the val- outstanding performers of the local baths here Thursday afternoon, ring last season, and during the leys, and much more in the mounsummer he has met and defeated Cherry still was swimming strongly tains. During a part of Friday all some of the best middleweights on when he came out of the pool, unat 9 : 15 o'clock this morning roads out of MbntpeUer were prac- ihe coast. Van is over six feet tall assisted, is clever with his mitts, while Just to show that the long stay in the and the blocked, and tically railway trains Carroll is built from the east were many hours-latalong sturdier lines water hadn't harmed him, he performed a few stunts for the talking Conditions have been restored to and relies more upon his punch than motion pictures. normal. The principal sufferers were upon science for his points. His physician. Dr. R. G. Russell, Pete Jensen, the ambitious young the power and telephone companies, who had examined the swimmer beboth of which had wires broken in slugger from Riverton, draws a difficult assignment In the person of fore he started his record swim, gave various parts of the city, temporarily him another examination after he d another putting many lines, out of commis- Peg Johnson InJohnson fouaht sev had finished and said he believed preliminary. sion. easily, could have added ten The effect of the storm was to de-l- eral main preliminaries last season Cherry and he was a great favorite with the hours to his time. threshing, but it also put the fans. The mark WHT He declsloned Jensen in one ground In shape for fall plowing, of the cards last season, but the the target set by Cherry when he bemuch of which will now be done. his swim, but he cut that period gan e residents say that it was Riverton battler has taken on conadvice of friends. the heaviest snowfall for October siderable weight and gained much short at therecord smashed the preCherry's that they had ever known In Bear experience since that time and he vious mark of 81 hours and 58 minLake county. While much of the hopes to even the count with Peg in utes set by Martha Hill in Texas. fall will melt in the next few days Monday's bout. Fritz Pollel and Art Lewis are Miss Hill set her record only a few in the valleys, the high mountains days after Mrs. Myrtle JIuddleston d will retain a great portion of tbe matched in the first prehad established the previous mark introsnow, and this will be available next liminary. The curtain-raisduces Hugh Martin against Jimmy In a New York swim. year for irrigation Davis. The first bout will be called Special to The Tribune. at 8:30 p. m. G ROVER. Wyo Approximately 14 Inches of snow, the first of any consequence of the season, has fallen Shade, Willis in Main In Star valley. Some grain Is still Event of Chicago Show some bound but not standing, is still In the much and stacked, peelal to Tbe Tribune stack, not threshed, here, and must CHICAGO, Oct. 14. Dave Shade, remain so until the weather clears the California middleweight, and WELLS, Ner Work on the new up Cowboy Jack Willis of Texas will O. S. L Western Pacific crossing Is be the principals In the windup of iwogreswlm nicely, three days of SOME HOLLYHOCK! the boxing show here tomorrow stormy weather ha ring done little 10 The Tribune. Bredal night. They will box ten rounds to more than settle the dust The Utah Construction company is rushing the GOODING Idaho -- Hollyhocks al- a decision, and weigh 100 pounds. most compete with trees In growing In their previous meeting on the work through to avoid any possible s In the cement pouring due around Gooding Bernice Levy, the coast, some six months ago. Willis young daughter of Mr and Mrs. Har- knocked Shade down for a nine to early frosts. Railroad officials rery Levy, has grown one to a height of count Jack also gave Mickey Walk- port that practically all materials thirteen feet three inches, taking the er, the middleweight champion, a their own crews will Install are on championship from w C. Agne. who clone fight in California about a year the ground and they expect tbe bridge completed early in December. previously haw toe tallest hollyhock. ago. Georgetown Best IN Point Getters; Drexel Leadin PROBATE AND GUARDIANSHIP NOTICES. 'Contolt couatjr clrk or the reip!tl airier! for farther information.) A successful preseaEPHRAIM son campaign out of the way. Coach Ike Young is now putting the finishing touches on his 8now college grid warriors in preparation for their opening game of the Junior College league Friday against the Westminster Parsons at Salt Lake. Despite facing the start of the season with but two lettermen in camp, the Badgers have developed into a strong threat for Junior college honors. They looked especially impressive in their recent victory over Richfield high on ;r muddy field. In this game. Staker, Jewkes, Kenny, Huchison and Sorenson all proved capable backfleld aides to Captain Buck Lamb, the one veteran backfleld star. On the line, Knudsen. letter-maLeonard and Johnson, ends; Peterson. Rasmussen, Coombs. Jackman. tackles; Badgers, Brian. Brelnholt and Holman, guards, and Roscnburg, center, all leave Ike Laurels. work- Rtpon Is figured to give low out at Iowa City. Analyzing yesterday s games, tha sideline experts figure that Michigan, Chicago and Purdue were decisively outplayed, but that Northwestera was the victim of costly fumbles. Ohio State had three opportunities to score and it seized two of them, bagging a 10 to 0 victory. Tha Buckeyes' vaunted backfleld. to tear the Northwestern forward wall to pieces, did nothing of the sort, but Ohio State was alert to take advantage of the fumbles which opened the gateway to scoring opportunities. It took Indiana twenty-eigyears to score a single point against Michscored but the Hoosiers a igan, touchdown and made it stick for m 6 to 0 triumph. Iowa Batters Maroons; Gophers Show Power. Iowa defeated Chicago, 13 to 0, by virtue of a superior backfleld, with Mayes McLean, a Cherokee Indian, at fullback, the Impelling force. Minnesota, In walloping Purdue, IS to 0, revealed the same grinding power that made them feared a year ago. In Nagurskl, the Gophers profess to have a fullback worthy of being compared with Joesting. Illinois acquired a little more polish yesterday In scoring a victory over Coe, whUt Wisconsin engaged In nothing more than practice by smothering Cornell college, using only reserves. Eb-be- le OUCH! A corps of mechanics worked all night on the ear of Pete de Poolo. in an effort to have it ready for the test Times. to Illinois' Parsons Friday. I I State, Indiana, Minnesota, Iowa Loom as Threats Ohio Ephraim Men Point for Opening Game of Year Against Tilts. d With Uzcudun Southern elevens, after gaining a running start in the tussle for honors, fared less fortunately in their latest forays. kept up its march by taking the measure of Texas university, while Centenary trimmed the Texas moral Aggies and Virginia gained satisfaction in holding Princeton to a scoreless tie in one of Saturday's biggest surprises, but otherwise the scoreboard was not so bright. Yale gained revenge for its 1927 setback at the hands of Georgia by muzzling the Bulldogs, 21 to 6, while Harvard beat North Carolina. 20 to 0; Colgate whipped Virginia Poly, 35 to 14, and Cornell university checked I to 6. Centre wandered westward to take a 60 to 0 plastering from Missouri. The Big Three of California football came through triumphantlv in their latest tests. Stanford had a romp with the University of California (southern branch), but California was extended to beat the heavier Washington State eleven. 13 to 3. while Southern California had r its hands full downing the rugged St. Mary's team, 19 to 6. (Copyright, 1928. Publishers Alabama looked impressive in the cate. south, beating the Mississippi Ag46 to 0. while gies, Georgia Tech trimmed Tulane. 12 to 0. LOOKS STRONG .. Nebraska reserves filled most of the positions when the Huskers entertained Montana State, but it was Cocaptain Blue Howell who scored By AL DEMAREE, the four touchdowns in a 26 to 6 deFormer Pitcher New York Giants. feat of the Mountaineers. of Bobby Jones in the short space Oklahoma regulars demonstrated twelve years has won every conceivtheir power by defeating a strong is while and worth honor able golf freshman squad. 34 to 0. looked upon today as the "perfect is human But only 'Bobby golfer." and the human element enters into his game the same as it does into other golfers'. lnnac ' tvnf rtmnlov if it ic rC nas' a complex. is sible sy his dislike, amounting to almost a real fear of eighteen hole matches. his And I can readily appreciate feeling that eighteen holes is not a true test of a golfer's ability. If they limited some baseball games to five innings or even seven innings, Two Fractured Ribs Prevent many pitchers of the past and presItalian's Appearance ent who are comparatively unknown would have been stars of the first Against Basque. magnitude. Any number of pitchers in the mag NEW YORK. Oct. 14 (Pi. Paulino jors and minors are known as pitchers" and are almost the Basque woodchopper, Uzcudun, disand unbeatable at that will have to find somebody else betance. But the true test of a pitcher sides Roberto Roberti ts to fight at is the closing inning of a ball game field this Wednesday night. and that is why men like Alexander, Humbert Fugazy announced Vance, Benton and Haines of the that Roberto would be unable to today meet present day and Johnson, Cy Young. the Basque and that he was making Mathewson, Walsh and the other efforts to find an acceptable substistars of the past were great. tute. Fugazy sard examina"Doc" Crandal. the old Giant tions showed the big Italian was pitcher, would hardly have ever lost suffering from fractures of two ribs a game if five innings constituted a and would be unable to fight for six game. That made him a great relief weeks at least. pitcher in. the closing- - innings, but "With ttns"battre bfT'tpTOgram, he never could win starting a game. the week's boxing card in the MetThus, Bobby Jones' mental out- ropolitan district is somewhat scant. look on a match is entirely George Courtney, middleweight conis in it an different than tender, takes on Wilson Yarbo of one. He knows he can make mistakes Cleveland at the St. Nicholas arena in the long route without their betomorrow in what, at the moing fatal and the result is he does ment, looksnight like the best match of not make them. the week. Psychology plays a greater part in any sport 'than appears to the I -- lating Judge William Mci.rca, leader of the Blues, upon the tatter' team victory at Fort Douglas. Watching the ceremony which officially closed the post tournament season are W. R. Granville and C. Sweet, prominent post players. Teachers, FOUR BIG TEN TEAMS ASSURE 1 TITLE CONTENDERS TROUBLE SNOW ELEVEN the Red, congratu- E. V Gibson, captain of KANSAS CITY. Oct. 14 (). The grid teams of Grinnell. Missouri and Hays Teachers stood out in the minds of fans who mulled over weekend contests in which Big Six conference teams competed. None of Saturday's games had any bearing on the title race. The Grinnell Pioneers, beaten by and Kansas, 14 to 0, outweighed doped as easy victims of the Iowa the State eleven, sprang biggest upset of the day In defeating Noel Workman's eleven, 3 to 0. Regarded as the easiest game of the day for any Big Six team, Hays Teachers threw a scare into Bo Kansas Aggies, led at the half 7 to 2, and succumbed only after the Aggie Wildcats had clawed their way through the Pedagogues' defense for three touchdowns in the second half to win. 22 to 7. Missouri opened its season by running rampant through Centre, 60 to 0. Scouts who went to Columbia to see what Gwynn Henry had unearthed for his 1928 machine, went home speculating on their chances of keeping the Tigers from another title this season. Kansas met a fighting Washington eleven in St. Louis and only a last period scoring punch enabled the Jayhawkers to gain a tie. 7 to 7. Last year the teams ended play knotted second II TEIS le Week-En- Van-derb- ilt sec- - lguc J. GOULD, Associated Press Sports Writer. CHICAGO, Oct. 14 (If). Football reputations and championship laurels usually safe enough through the October stages of the gridiron grapple, have been blown thus far like so many autumn leaves in the wake of a swirling cyclone. To the toil that has already been taken, the latest series of skirmishes, amoiiR other surprising events, witnessed the downfall of two 1927 champion arrays, Pittsburgh of the east and the Texas Aggies of the southwest Michigan's straight setback, at the hands of Indiana, and the NaTal academy's third successive shutout when Notre Dame romped off with the decision d over the midshipmen before an astonished, jam of 122,000 spectators in Chi- cago's lamous lake front stadium, Soldier field. West Virginia Topples PittsbflrghUr Panthers. The Pitt Panthers, who carried the eastern banner to the far west last year as the climax to a great season, fell before the onslaught of West Virginia, 9 to 6, while the powerful Texas Aggies were blanked, 6 to. 0. by Centenary's "gentlemen,'' the iit-tLouisiana aggregation that appears to delight in taking a fall out of its neighbors In the Lone Star state. Last season Southern Methodist was handled with complete lack of ceremony by the gentlemen. It's a strange season that finds two such ordinarily top ranking elevens as Michigan and the Navy without a victory to the credit of either by the middle of October. In fact, the odds against such an occurrence, figured a month ago. would have been around 100 to 1 at the least. Yet, the Wolverines liave been toppled twice in a row, by Ohio Wesleyan and Indiana, while the Sailors have failed even to tally a single point in losing to Davis and Elkins, Boston college and Notre Dame Chicago has acquired an annual habit of putting on at least one tremendous gridiron spectacle and the game yesterday added new lustre to this record. Southern Eleven Fare Less ;ven y a ien- Ed- - State Defeated. le 6 6 hn's 18-Ho- Pitt, record-break-I- 12 12 12 7 JZ. was U., lasers Offer Congratulations m surprise Bobby Eears The Amateur Match storm-tosse- 13T 1C3 Texas ; .FT. to- - RS By ALAN lull- - 6 6 TOP-NOTCHE- Navy Sans Win, Scores; Tex- - as lolo- FINDS SEV ERAL BIG SIX BEATEN R 1927 20 B- 4 GRID REPUTATIONS SHATTERED UNUSUALLY EARLY THIS FALL rs ' 11 TOISKK 15, 1928. i MID-OCTOBE- if (M Play in the Shubach trophy tournament and the Red and I I Blue team competition was postponed Sunday at Nibley park due to the cold weather. According to Mickey Riley, club professional, the matches will be played next Sunday, e hiding by the same schedule The Red and Blue teams tied last week and the playoff was to have been played Surtday Work Progresses On O. S. -- tie-up- L Bridge flSildb CIGAR UTAH BEVERAGE CnmnUsuii Cagnr Corp., New York I DISTRIBUTING MIFWHNttiMin |