OCR Text |
Show Basket Ball . Bingham Loses to Parowan Like a thunder bolt out of the sky came the news of the defeat of the plucky High School bas-keteers bas-keteers by the Parowan five at the Deseret Gym on Wednesday evening. With ten straight wins in the Jordan division naturally the boys were popular favorites and the Bingham fans wtae strongly in evidence. Bingham opened with, three foul pitches and kept the mar-(Continued mar-(Continued on Page Four) came a contest of foul pitching, due to the numerous penalties inflicted that appeared rather doubtful. The lead swayed back and forth until Marsden found the hoop with only thirty seconds sec-onds to go. Brady and Viette worked splendidly with Allias, who was ever ready to tail in shots or to pick up a fumble underneath the basket and drop it for a goal. The score: Bingham G. T. F. P. Vietti, If .1 1 1 3 Brady, rf 2 2 2 6 Allias, c ......3 13 10 16 Patton, lg 0 10 0 Rimby, rg 0 0 0 0 Hall, rf If 0 0 0 0 Totals 6 17 13 25 Parowan G. T. F. P. Rowley, If 0 1 1 1 Marsden, rf :...-2 6 4 8 Ward, c - 6 6 4 16 Thornton, lg 0 10 0 Rollins, rg 0 1 1 1 Evans, rg . 0 0 0 C Totals - 8 15 10 26 Referee Maw. j Umpire Maughn. BASKET BALL , (Continued from Page One) f ' gin at the quarter, 7 to 4, and at the half had a two point lead, 12 to 10. Shortly after the beginning begin-ning of the third period Ward tied the score. The Miners then staged a spurt that shot them up to a six point advantage. Brady Bra-dy was fouled as he shot, but the marker counted, and then v,- he added two frcm the foul line. Parowan bridged the span andi soon evened the game at 20 all. From this moment on it be-1 |