Show THE OGDEN (UTAH) STANDARD-EXAMINE- R FRIDAY EVENING JULY 181947 Two Ogdenites Siill Bid For Utah Title Hurls — Powers Shutout Two-Hi- t 2-Hii- ney Henry Matheiu and Bill Johnston of Ogden Arnold Goff Steve Howells and Dodger Dougherty of Fort Douglas and Walter Cocgriff and Joe Bernolfo of the Salt Lake Country club also survived Thursday's play which featured eight overtime matches and eight more decided on the final hole Dougherty won the longest match of the day nosing out Dee Richards of Ogden in a first round scrap with a birdie Doughdowned Greenley Timerty later 2 up othy Cosgriff defeated Ken Rogerson on the 21st hole coming from behind after trailing four holes with six left to play on the first 18 Cosgriff won his second round match from Dave McNeil 6 and 5 Goff 1944 and 1945 champion birdied the 19th to win from Dick McKean who gave the trouble until the 18th leading him three up at one point Goff bested olio Gibbons 3 and 2 in second und play Bernolfo last year's runnerup who won from Dean Robinson 7 and 6 in first round play took a match from Norm Schult winning 1 up on the 21st to enter the quarterfinal round El Monte's Johnston and Dick Mulliner also battled to the 21st before the Ogdenite won the second round match He previously defeated T D Morris one up Howells defeated Hebe Rutter 2 and 1 then went on to beat Russ Swonson 1 up Mathieu won easily from Tom Williams 1 up and later from Ben Lingenfelter 4 and 2 Lundahl took a 4 and 3 match from Gordon Crane of Provo and later defeated L R Ivins 6 and 5 Paired today for matches which will determine the are Lundahl and Mathiep Goff and Cosgriff Bernolfo and Johnston and Howells and Dougherty Bud Powers the Utah-Idah- o Boy of 1946 pitched the Legion baseball nine to a Brigham 0 decision over Baker-Merri- ll of Ogden at Affleck park Thursday Powers struck out 17 of the Ogden players and gave up only two nus ne issued iour bases on balls Ail-Americ- The teams will tangle at Brigham City Monday evening in the second game of the three game series The winners will qualify for a post in the Utah American Legion playoff at Affleck park starting July 30 Powers collected one hit in the contest The Brigham-ite- s bagged only five hits off Keith Downs Downs struck out 11 and pitched superb ball The only run of the game came in the fifth inning Forrest of the Brighamites walked and advanced to second on a sacrifice by Whittaker White singled to send Forrest home with the winning tally le boy of 1946 pitched the Brigham Bud Powers Utah's 0 to a team decision of Ogden over Baker-Merri- ll baseball Legion at Affleck park Thursday He struck out 17 and gave up only two series at hits The teams meet in the second game of a three-gam- e Brigham City next Monday night ail-Ameri- 1-- Coast Outfits Change Posts By Associated Press Once you get past the first three teams there's no telling who you'll meet in the clubby Coast league Today for example Sap Diego is fourth Seattle fifth Sacramento sixth Portland seventh Hollywood last Yesterday it was Sacramento Portland San Diego Seattle and Hollywood What it amounts to virtually is second division with a five-teaLos Oakland and Angeles only San Francisco staying above 500 The leading Angels pelted San POCATELLO Idaho July 1ft Francisco last night 10-- 2 to main AP) — Substantial gains in Idaho five-gam- e a Falls and Twin Falls almost offset tain margin over Oaklosses in Salt Lake City and Ogden land which humbled Hollywood semi-finalis- ts Decline Noted In P L Crowds m 35-7- 23-0- 54 80 "v 'anTf-- "'" duced T unusually — large numhlr in- - birds to remain to nest aS jLJ water levels mean that crop there is in sight 5wper Manitoba tor msWTgod hatch is now coming ntt om a continue to favor 1947 oy nucks duck population wnich variously announced season it is Unlimited and pinWith juvenile mallards to tails already taking inter many hundreds of the restoration "rts of the BOISE July 18 (AP) —Idaho large broods from all an Districts of the ""v""° '"The overall picture reveals that state will "start Chinese pheasant as many breeding bird tree Not ?Uffi?X to western Canada as hatings and game conums-dateexsiSn said Some flood damage due totonestthe 1947 for ? cessive rains has resulted birds and bi8 Saskatchewan game ing stock in eastern Commission members and southern Manitoba not affect erPacon: These heavy rains didin southern today 0 areas of dense nesting nay summer and pre- uvtuug lh Here Saskatchewan and Alberto vir' While th been sufficient k uira aates are cipitation has serious uniform any eliminate the length of the season tually to vary between districts Open- drought losses in these extremely will H ill " rlav — J "uwuu (hnn important breeding wuj start at noon as 50 per cent down The 581106 holds true for central ?nd n°rthern Saskatchewan while lu enirai ana northern Alberta &e bird Population is down 20 to M C°mP8red t0 laS fear 111 wp other words the heavy nest- density in southern Saskatche- - Dales Set for Pheasants 11 P" Facing dudhf?'6 £2 The commission retained the hen law which prohibits the shootiThe limit ng" of hen pheasants was set at two cock pheasants except in southwestern Idaho where the limit is three A series of special deer elk ram moose and antelope hunts — similar to those state in 1946 — will be held this year Deer seasons in most cases will be shorter than last year UTICA N Y — Howie Brodt Ted Chadwicks outpointed vinci iiy uome W Y- - 8 147 wan an d Alberta is at the of other parts of the breeding range But the overall hatch la ex cellent D U's chief naturalist Bert W Car tv right declares Heavy flood losses among n esters such as redheads and canvasbacks occurred in Manitoba's Netley marshes but mating flights have been resumed and it is be lieved second-nestin- g are now under way Highattempts water con ditions have persisted in the great marshes east of The Pas also in Manitoba and the nesting population there is thin but the great marsh areas west of The Pas reaching into Saskatchewan have a good breeding population with mallards dominant l ie Athabasca delta in northern Alberta is shaping up better than first reports indicated Flood conditions forced the birds to nest back in surrounding bush-lanWhile the breeding popu3aj tion in that area is estimated as being down 30 per cent compalft to 1946 large broods of between seven and 12 young birds are now appearing over-wat- er ds 1 ht lf ed Baker-Merri- ll Brigham City ABHOAi ABHOA 2 2 0 0 Kapp If White If 10 0 0 Johnson 2b 3 0 1 May da hi 2b 4 0 3 5 Powers p 4 1 0 OlChrisfsn 3b 3 0 2 2 Hsacker rf 4 00 lb 4 0 10 l TRman lb 4 1 8 0Hop'beck 0 Tim'man c 4 0 12 1 RRmsn n 4 0 0 OiWorner cf 2 0 0 0 Forrest 3b 2 0 0 1 Kennedy ss 3 1 0 1 w udner n a o o Lundauist rt 3 1 n ft Br 'booker c 3 0i 18 0 Downs p 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Young If CaU cf 2 0 0 0 Totals 28 5 27 2 28 2 27 10 Totals Score by innings: 000 010 000—1 Brigham Baker-Merri- ll 000 000 000 0 — Summary Two base bit— Lundquist Stolen bases— Young 2 Christiansen Struck out — By Powers 17 Kennedy Downs 11 Bases on balls— Off Powers 5 Downs 3 Errors— Timmerman y RRasmussen Runs batted hite Forest Umpires— Joe Barney and Don Barney Time— 1:55 m but first half attendance at Pioneer baseball league games this year was down slightly from 1946 The figures were reported today by League Pres J P Halliwell For the six league cities the attendance this seasorKthrough games of July 4 the end of the first half totalled 255644 That compared with 257773 for the first half of 1946 The loss in Salt Lake City alone however was 33109 far more than the league's total deficit of 2129 Because their Derks field grandstand was incomplete the Salt Lake City Bees played all of their games away from home for the first three weeks of this season For Idaho Falls and Twin Falls kthis year's first-ha- lf season attendance set new records Halliwell reported" In the Russets' park 42692 persons attended first-hagames exceeding the previous record of in 1939 and last year's mark of 28130 At Twin Falls attendance this year reached 43944 also beating the record of 39015 in 1939 and last year's 35465 At Pocatello attendance was down from 28515 last year to this year and was far below the record of 42631 set in 1939 ed hotly-contest- ex-cha- hard-foug- an 1-- star-studd- W Juy Bumper wild duck crops vital areas oi been asvast nesting range have leve sured by sustained water p southern the t throughout excellenl and other s w WINNIPEG ier Against Ogden 0AL1 LAJ&E CITY July 18 (AP) Medal bick Lundahl of Logan d other favorites advanced to e round of eight today as the championship field was reduced from 32 in two rounds of play in the annual Utah amateur golf tour- 23-ho- Broods Point to Bumper Duck Canadian Large Hunting Season Gets 4-- 2 Tommy Seats hurled his seventh straight win to pitch San Diego's Padres to a 4 triumph over Sacramento The Padres thus squeezed 7-- into fourth place over Seattle Portland 2 which double-waxe- d 1 and San Fr'cisco 011 000 000— 2 9 2 3-- 7-- Los Angeles 010 080 001—10 13 1 Joyce Ross Matthewson and Ogrodowski Bauers and Malone 000 101 000— 2 5 2 201 010 OOx— 4 10 0 Hollywood Oakland Bothorn Hufford and Bearden and Raimondi Unser 020 001 001 — 4 10 0 010 024 OOx — Sacramento 790 San Diego Freitas Fletcher Gonzales and Fitzgerald Seats and Rice First (eight innings): 101 000 01—3 8 0 Seattle 200 000 00 — 2 4 0 Portland Besse and Sueme Stagg Dibiasi and Silvers Second: just about tipped the once beaten Paramount nine but two over the fence clouts by Payne and Taylor accounted for five runs and along with a triple by Taylor with the two on in the first just about covered the scoring efforts of the winners who rang up a 11 to 10 decision Arden Sunfreze and Railway Mail battled on even terms in a game won by the Mail Clerks 7 to 6 A five run outburst in the fifth on loose fielding by the dairymen won the ball game Tonight the Metropolitan teams play with Amblers battling American Legion at and Naval Supply Depot facing Utah General Depot an hour later Bank Smokery and Clearfield Navy complete the evening's schedule Summary of last night's games: Seattle Portland performance that is like AM-F- M MUSIC OUT OF THE HEAVENS IT'S DES MOINES July 18 (AP) — Stranahan and Marvin (Bud) Ward two of the better par busters hoped to take additional strides today toward their anticipated clash in the finals of the western amateur golf tournament Frank and Bud who finished one-tw- o in the western a year ago were the top favorites in the quarterfinal round but there were some railbirds around the Wakonda club wno appeared rather anxious to hedge on earlier predictions Stranahan the Toledo Ohio sharpshooter was matched against lanky Bill Campbell of Huntington W Va 1947 Princeton university captain and Ward's foe was Johnny Jacobs of Cedar Rapids Iowa four-tim- e Iowa champ Radio-Phon- o MM Combination with automatic record I changer and rugged match play competitor Stranahan was six under par as he raced through two opponents yesterday climaxing the double round with a 2 and 1 win over William Walsh of Kalamazoo Mich Ward the former champion from Wash also was in the Spokane sub-pclass as he swept through two rounds yesterday He was four under par for the 28 holes he played Utah's two entries dropped by the wayside Thursday afternoon both players going out at the hands of sharpshooting Robert Cardinal of San Francisco Cardinal elimR H E inated Bill Korns 4 and 3 then Williamson Auto 8 8 1 turned around to defeat Phil Kun-kl- e 1 up Kunkle had General Mills 2 4 5 Batteries — Lane and Watson trimmed John Stoltz of previously Ottumwa Blood Lowder and Young Um- la 4 and 3 pires —Heninger and Agricola Tt Oeden Business Colleen 10 H V 0 11 12 8 4 Paramount Dairy catteries — and Thomp son Crowe Liptrot and G Wiese Um— pires Casteel and Heninger R H R Arden Sunfreze 6 12 4 7 6 3 Kailway Mail Service Batteries —Maneh and WiosaBair Saunders and 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