OCR Text |
Show fit?! ffi m ?Ab F yt?ttMttyytyttftty yytT MA Preston Today This alternoon on the North Cache gridfield the Bulldogs encounter their - old enemies, from the north, the Preston Indians. The latter, still stinging from their 25-- defeat administered by the Bulldogs last season, will certainly be painted and primed for war. Coach Whitings team expects a tougher battle thans was given them by the last wfeek; hence they are leaving nothing undone to make preparations for the contest. They are by no means understunatlng the strength or determination of Indians Geaeh Joe Call of Ifeston has practically his entire last years team, all members of inhich have grown much In a year, so that his line Is much heavier and harder hitting than ATHLETIC-SHO- NIGHT aggrega- tion will bo stronger than they were against Logan last week there .s no doubt. In the game. It is very probable at the full strength of the Indians was never revealed against th Grizzlies. Just what the Bulldogs starting line up will be Is not certain, but there will likely be some changes from that of last week. The following Is the starting line as used against the Jaugars: center, Wayne Smith; guards, Glen Tout, Victor Waite; tackles, Lyle Tripp, Marcus Funk; ends, Ace Johnson, Vaughan Bair; quarter back and captain, Ralph Gutke; full 'back, Keith of last substitutions Fridays game were: Bergeson for Funk; Villet for Baker. (The Norcachian N. C. High) d; Tennis Aspirants Wielding Rackets Ir Fall-Pra- ctice With several of last years racketeers strutting their stuff, already the Utah Aggies are encouraged never before has the outlook seemed so bright for tennis. Almost everyday the courts are filled with aspirants who promise to make next spring events Interesting. Captaiiy Jack Christian sen. Glade Linebaugh, Dutch Cannon and Seth Parkinson of last season's team are back to school again with all ye old enthusiasm. There are several new additions for berths at the A" itjiis l ar. Among the most prominent. Jack Christiansen, the second, who halls from Logan high. This lad won the state high school tennis championship in the singles last year, Claude Jensen, another new student sallies,, forth, a former holder of the Inter mountain junior college Brother of the veteran Jack, Ralph Christensen, another frosh from Wells-villis going to fcnake It plenty hot for the regulars this year. Up and coming, Rex Dibble has Improved wonderfully since last year and many others will be hard to beat out of places that they hold down. Capt. Christiansen urges all who are interested an tennis to begin preparing themselves for a strenuous tournament. Competition will be ver- - keen and remember green things grow! (Student ufc) cham-plonshi- e, What is the secret of success Button Push. Pencil Never be lead Window Take Ice Always keeppains cool. Calender Be up to date. Barrel Never lose your head. Fire Make light of every- thing Balloon Go higher. Knife Be sharp Hammer Do a driving Do you think the candidate put enough fire m his speech Oh yes, the trouble was he didnt put enough speech In the OUR WORK IS LIKE FACTORY It lien WORK look shoes detracts from whole appearance, jour lour shoes should alwajs look like new. This ean be done if jou let us repair them the factory waj Moderate prices. shabby, jour it 0. Wendcnes 115 North Main, Logan I W yyyyy pf f f y yyy yyy yyiyyiyiff ytyy - Vil ONE OF V v t ' , Admission SOc GRIZZLIES HAVE TOUGH GAME WITH TOOELE Oil SATURDAY Decision Fans Thornton Wins. It was just a case of youth howmg age that young folks were made for lovemaking anJ wrestling, was that main bout on the card at the Allen arena Ira Thursday evening when Dern used only 2t minutes tn put Yankee Bob Hendricks of Cleveland out of the running for the evening. Judging from the number of visitors that present their cal ling cards for Mr. Dem there are a number of ancient grap-pler- s who have not had the idea knocked into their heads that the best men cm the mat today are under sixty summers did. One is rate in giving Mr Hendricks credit for amusing the wrestling fans Immediately following the Civil War. The Old Man of the mat rmt up a good show for the first ten minutes. It took just that long to show Ira that he was meeting a has been coming" champion. The Utahn taxied this stage of the game but his runs were blocked with the ropes twice and his .machine would not rt-clear of the third attempt. A roughhouse period was, next in order and before the fafts knew what it was all about Dern had Bob pinned with a head chancery and a bar lock. That was at the end of 15 minutes. A couole of rabbit punches to the back of Mr. Hendrick's neck and a good old dish of crab ju-- t about tells the high spots of the second canto. (Mr Hendrick'struggled to prawl out of the bowl but he was peared for keeps in just six minutes and no seconds Patrons of the mat game are looking forward to the next Thursday night when Big Bill Thornton is slated to try out his wildness on Iras anatomy. This match has been brewing for sometime and according to the indicator the storm should be a regular cyclone. The eveopener. number on last nights card proved to be the main event as far as In terest Is concerned. Thornton took on a mighty good grappling partner in Al Newman, the Stle Lake bread mixer Bill won the match however, by taking the first and third falls. In the first frame Bill was all over the ring and Al too. He was heavy on arm strangW crabs, cradle holds and head- locks while Al used his strength in getting out of the t. &f arms oxraon-enhis big loving At the fifteen minute period BUI herded in a couole of headlocks and within five minutes he worked Al into a double arm Strangle to take the first fall twenty minutes after the sound of the starting gon O'. Big Bill came hack bent on broke and each of the matmen taking the second fall with a series of headlocks. For a time it looked bad for the baker bov. Then the storm haded down, on everything each others heaefc that was In sight or hearing. Al seemed to set the better of the spurt Bill then tried to down Al with a slam hut the ca'-- e maker drooped all of his batter on Bills head on the way over Bill came up dazed and Al'put an en to the frame with a couple of headlocks just as the sixth minute ticked off. While Thornton was resting he eoncQted the ic'fea that he could throw At out of the Tin? and go home but not so: Newman had a sav so In the matter and he stayed within the four rones The excitement of this period came to a climix when Bill mace a dive at Al mid section; misced him and went parking on the ringside seats He came back slugged - fu-Th- done by Lee, a left Rnrng Crook- - being eT and Gordon is doing the very accurate ston . Selects rrob- passing. He m tossing fee pigskin, able Lineup For The GRIZZLIES ready 0 Fresh from a triumpu Kickoff on Crimson lover .a strong Preston team, are drilling hard Field Visitors State the - Logamtes for- fee They ex foot-LOat- fiU ""W. - the-thi- ng e AT FIRST IN OPENER OF SERIES BEST t00Al twice behind the ear and on an- irm Much for Veteran .stretch damped and a body press to e From Cleveland Fat give air official vor. fall was all Bills in Clark and Barger seven minutes. Given CRIMSON FIELD I X "$$ J X 29-- Orediggers. pect to give fee state champs a stiff tussle. For the first time in years has Captain Vem Cooley M n Grlv-'beev Coach Burns Crookstons shifted to guard and s meet zlies Harris along with Atkinson Cliff Sterling v Tooele Orediggers who are de- -, should work splendidly Mel and Charles Kowallis fending the, state champion-'Olso- n ship. Last year they had one will probably hold down the r of fee most powerful elevens! tackle positions, with Alton i ever, seen on a high ' school Eames and Arnold Balling or J. I1 gridiron In Utah. They have! Roy Hall at ends. r of the prospects another Cortleigh Eliason will probS championship team this . year. ably start at center with Babe 9 .7k 4 A They showed their power by Quinney and Edward Scholes ' 441 $ k trouncing Judge Memorial high ready to enter fee fray at any last Friday to the tune of 53-- time. AsMicufed Press telephoto showing Cochrane of (he Philadelphia Athletics' reselling first in the world One of the heaviest lines in backfield Stewart Ryseries opening when St. Louis lost, ,V2. , the state Is representing the anInatthequarterback, Dean Hum- Tooele school this season. The and Don McCullough or SIMMONS KNOCKS OUT FIRST HOMER OF SERIES Harris forward wall will aver- - Phrie at halfback and elth J-X-- s missed the Clark-Stevefour round; go should have many regrets. The fracas was a triple treat: push-bal- l, necking and good ole; fashioned slugging. At the end of the go .both fighters were so tired with pushing, pulling, hitting, pulling faces and docking that It reoulred the utmost effort for them to walk out the ring unaided. - All the spring had gone out of both of them and there was just the fall left. Now, as to the outcome, there was some dispute just after Referee Bateson raised the mit with Fat in it, designating . that the big hunk of flesh had t : - Xx . X 'f X I XX $ 4 f the decision in his opinion, L tv M' s VV .. 'S i f some though it was closer to ,3. a draw while others just said Boo. At any rate, Clark was "Y better than he had been in most of his previous matches He was right up and coming from the first drop of the hammer and he .rushed Brick as far back as to equal the distance traveled by those two motorists who made the conti nent in reverse. Another attraction that proved to be a star performance on an all first class bill, was the four round fistic encounter between Kid Barger, c. t i and Walter Still of Grand Junction. Colorado. The it, referee gave the decision . to A Barger. & The first rouru was used in V . r X rii feeling; the second was Bargers by a email margin and " . . ) S. , y the third was the Kid's by an A edge. The fourth frame was a I "W - d draw giving Barger a net prof fit of one round, has Barger a quick cutting left and a Al hhiuiton of (he Athletic is shown in the Associated Press telephoto crossing the plate afterlutting workf of speed but his punches a home didnt carry enough weight be- delphia, run hi the fourth inning. The club mascot greets him. The , bt... Louis Cardinal lost to Philahind them to even rock StillS head backward. He connected FRISCH REACHES SECOND IN FIRST INNING with more clean smashes than did Walter however, which won the eye of the referee. r who ns if fi ! Z , 7 A V. 0. Worley m 5 andXhirteen iTZ'W - Trea-sureto- p. XXp' ( k cl: r 5-- PROBABLE LINEUP t FOR Tooele Anderson Whitehouse Barton Hanks Stevens It. lg Eliason or B. Quinney Atkinson c rg Kowallis rt Balling S. Ryan re ..,.qb..., McCulloch ..Smith Tate (c) Pennovich Lee lhb. Millinkovich rhb Humpheries G. Quinney or K. Ryan fb Gordon Logan Substitutes: Stewart, Gessel and O. Anderson, ends ; W. Anderson, Hendricks, Peterson and Romney tackles ; Smith Poulter, Bullen and Mitton guards; Scholes center; C. McCulloch, quarterback Willmore, Partington and Worley halfbacks. Tooele Substitutes: Kucks and Pickel, ends; Smith and Gillispie, tackles; Elkington, Beecher and Morgan, guards; Huffaker, center; Barlow, quarterback; Christiansen and Rose, halfhacks; Slaytor, fullback. Officials: Westover, referee; II. Reading, umpire; Sorenson, head linesman. tir-Rini- (The Grizzly) The Cardinals second baseman, Frisch, safe at second in the first inning of the first game of the world Note the ball In this Associated Press telephoto. series which was won by Philadelphia. 5-- Ag. Club Holds First Meeting Levi Meyers, Aggie Track Capt. Stars In Eastern Relay Meet possibilities of western agricul- ture and encouraged the group to develop itself tural leadership, club A membership In agriculcorn-rcllte- Id (non-region- al, e COALMINED NOCOALBETTERMINED NQ BETTER Good coal made better by careful preparation at the mine thats Peerless! It is screened and sized over one of the finest and most modern tipples in Western America. Coming from a seam of vast depth, it is hard, clean and lustrous. Try 9 ton of Peerless be a burner of better coaL al) (non-regiona- m CAU SANDERS COAL & WOOD Phone 293 804 No. Main s - GAME TOOELE-LOGA- .le Olsen Cooley (c) Has Outstanding Athletic Career J . il Kent Postition Logan Eames or Hull Lient J. H. Pitzer Among those recently added to the I .S.A.C, staff Is Military Lieutenant John H. Pitzer, who hails from Fort Monroe, West There he attended the Coast Artillery school and concentrated hi efforts on a battery officers course. While attending the army school from 1920 to 1923 he was very ac tive in many ef the major sports. His record which Is a credit to any man. Consists of four jears tackle on the football team, two years of which he made a letter, four years as an army boxer and also acted in the position of manager of the boxing team for his junior and senior years at school. He also in played lacrosse, participated ail indoor meet and was a rifle nuirksman. Polo is a favorite sport of Lieutenant Pitzcrs. He has played in that game against many very famous and outstanding players. In 1928 he refereed ail the fi gilts held in Schofield Barracks, a bowl with a seating rapacity of eleven thousand. That he is more than an athlete is shown by the fart that during his seuior year, 1923, ho took a pair in the Hundredth Night Show, a play put on, one hundred nights before graduation. This production hi coached by New York producers whose services are procured fo'r the express purpose of directing the play. Lieutenant Iltzer likes hunting, ud other outdoor sports. fishing, He has made a number of friends since coming here, and says he likes it fine, - fX.XllXAiAT n, 7 start- fee'ProbabIy flashy sophomore fullback will probably see plenty of action. The Grizzlies are going into nfHrnliiciriffS Jo9 RnsBan1 Caale determined to fight to aud a finish Saturday and .they JW season. will need plenty of suport from state star backs of XX. ?r However he has a host of ball get carriers fighting for regular (The Grizzly) Tats assignments. Captain regular centerIast year has asked the Young man, been shifted to end. Tate is zoology teacher, do you know a good passAiagger and a hard wild-cats about tackier. Center is being taken anything Yes sir, Gashouse replies care of W Wayne Hanks and Willie. I was out with one Tubby Huffaker substitutes of last night. LINEMEN HEAVY I mean the kind with teeth Ray Barton and Raleigh and claws, thundered fee Beecher have fee edge on the prof. other candidates for guard do Sure, replied Willie, Beecher tips the you think I got all those positions. beam at 2Q0 pounds and Barton scratches on my face and neck Howard from someone, a weighs around 195. throwm Whitehouse and Willis Smith sponge are fee leading tackle aspirants both weighing more than 170 Our father slipped upon the pounds and open holes through ice, the line like snow plows. CapBecause he could not stand, tain Tate is the smallest man He saw the glorious stars and of fee first eleven; he weighs stripes, exactly 180 pounds Kicking is We saw our father land 4? X; und-Xt- LOSE TWO STARS tSS ... xf - mad heavier than Logan. ' The U. S. A. C. Ag drive held its farst meeting yesterahd was appointed day in the east room of the plans for the years activity were discussed. The committee Some seventy-fiv- e cafeteria are Leon Sw'enson, George members and were students Levi Meyers, popular Aggie Glen, Fern Howell, Mahlon Rice over of half whom and Edward Morse. returned present, trackman recently John K. Loosle is president from the east, where he, with ere, nrw students, to hear E. G. President Petersons of the club. Nate Long of the U. of U address. He of short the , were the only Utah men to be, spoke (Student Life) chosen on the U. S. track Student Life. team. last summer Captain REGION ONE STANDING love to have a leapard Early was given an invitation Meyers skin coat. to represent the R. M. C in Oh, mv dear, they show the national A. A. U. meet snots terribly Altho he was in a poor condition as to training for running the strenuous half mile race, he accepted and went back to Pittsburgh where he THE UTAH FARMERS SCHEDULE made such a great showing in his races, that he was in-- j Vited to be a member of the This years football schedule is the hardest ever U. S. relay team to oppose undei taken by the Big Blue Team, Romneys men Great Britain in the interare undeftaking to play eight more games in as many national meet. At Pittsburgh, Meyers won consecutive weeks. Fridays Results third place in the half mile m North At Richmond Cache 6, South Cache 6. A. U. A. the junior The time October 4 Colorado College at Colorado Springs. Preston Preston 0, At 20, he Logan event in made this was October 11 Colorado University at Logan. (Alumni Ogden--Dav- is At 25, Ogden 7, Home-coming the U. S. relay l Game.) Boxelder 46, L, D. S. 0, (non- At Brigham City team lost the international October 1& University of Southern California at regional) was a race, Meyers given Los Angeles. big l) At Salt Lake East 41, Weber 0, hand, being the only man to October 25 University of Wyoming at Logan. beat his opponent. November 1 B. Y. U. at Ogden. He will captain the Aggie This Weeks Schedule November 8 Denver University at Denver. track team again this year. Preston at North Cache. (Student Life) November 15 Colorado Aggies at Logan. Weber at South Cache. November 27 Utah University at Salt Lake. Bear River at Boxelder, Nit: When do the leaves Tooele at Logan to turn? Saturday) Wit: The night before exams. . n j (non-region- - t tyyyymtf V Derns Youth maS-qnth- fire. '' WW. COCHRANE SAFE LAST W EVER STAGED HERE Jau-gar- Hlll-var- 4W SATURDAY, Oct. 4, 2:00 p. m. 0 last years. That the Preston C )Wi yyyyyyyyyyyyyryyy i EBALILLogan High vs, Tooele State Champions Bulldogs Battle - C- ' North Cache Tf MtyTyy?yyyyMMHMTf . 4. |