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The Ogden Standard-Examiner from Ogden, Utah • 9

Location:
Ogden, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SUNDAY MORNING MARCH 19 1939 THE OGDEN STANDARD-EXAMINER 9-A Ci uW iT li Mem svbvq ear li i Lucky Sevens1 Outfit To Oppose Gkosts In Rare Hoop Spectacle Super Showmen the Original Colored Ghosts Respond to Clamor of Ogden Fans Return Game Double Header Scheduled i Five of Kind-Ghosts Smile At Thoughts of Twin BilL Cardinals Defeat World's Champs CULLIMORE IS RATED HIGH IN STATE CLASSIC I Players of Five Teams Are Honored Ogden Pivot Man Recognized By MATT TOE 411 settled the Original Colored Ghosts accepted invitations proffered by countless Ogdenites to return and dated their appearance at the new Ogden high school ST PETERSBURG Fla Marc" 18 (AP) The St Louis Cardins! pounded Bump Hadley for foj" runs inthe first inning then collected three more in the eighth rlf Joe Beggs to defeat the New or Yankees 7 to 6 today Eh in homer inside the park one on bae featured the first ir-nmg rally Joe Gordon hit for th circuit to start the scoring in the fifth and the world champs tied the count briefly in the seventh when Bill Knickerbocker tripled off Bill McGee with or then scored on Charley Keller's infield out New York (A) 6 30 1 St Louis (N) '782 Hadley Beggs (6) and Rosar Bowman McGee (6) and Bremer gymnasium for next Saturday evening March 25 staging a spectacle never before tried by a major team W1 This welcome announcement ar- rived in Ogden late Friday via the long distance phone from Manager Harold ylliams who ia in Sioux City Iowa at the bed-aide his criticaly-ill mother A re-scheduling of ia game at Ephraim Utah and cancellation of a date at a small town too far away to make the trip by game time were the reasons for including Ogden ngain Williams said You Like Ghosts Anyhow we think there are other reasons too It Js evident that Ogdenites like the Ghosts and the Ghosts like Ogden And how they like them! Two weeks ago with the colored cagers playing the allstars the crowd pulled almost to a man for the Ghosts and cheered their every effort And theip newest stunt? BAN HAMMER THROW AUGUSTA Me March IS Considering the event too dangerous Maine high schools hava dropped the hammer throw from track and field competition -v Jk Ghosts will The complete the best it i 'tl i fijraH? A VAN MUNGO the old pounding into shape- (t i A A A A -i: By MACK CORBETT The forwards picked themselves but there was practically nothing to choose among a uniformly good but by no means sensational froth of top-light guards Imd centers That is the story of the 1939 addition to the longest continuous basketball honor roll in existence The Deseret News-Standard-Examiner time-honored procession of all-state Utah scholastic hoopsters There was such a paucity of and talent among the guards and pivot men the deepest delving into individual case history was necessary to discern the top hands among several who placed nip-and-tuck in the customary poll of tournament officials and coaches But here they are the 156th 157th 158th 159th and 160th names in the historic parade of Beehive basketball greats: Dwane Esplin of Dixie and Grant Cullimore of Bear River forwards John Sorenson of South Cache center Joe Milburn of Uintah and Milo Rupp of Granite guards These players will receive the traditional gold basketballs presented by The Deseret News Unique Selection The 1939 all-state team is one of the first in recent history which does not include more than one man from the champions or runnersup Uintah and Bear River placed only one man each Dixie South Cache and Granite are also represented with one player each The same is true of the second team where Uintah is represented by Capt Ken Sowards at one forward spot Granite landed another man in Homer (Swede) Wade Bear River placed Robert Wassom at center South Cache secured one of the guard spots with Aquilla Allen and Payson snared the other with Russell Pickering The surplus of fine forwards includes little William David Sharp North Summit southpaw Le-Grande Hadlock Uintah Dale Maughan of South Cache who is even smaller Reed Stayner and LeGrande Gregory of Davis Fred Allen of Bear River and Oris Atkinson of South Summit Honorable Mention Bill Sharp North Summit Dale Maughan South Cache Oris Atkinson South Summit LeGrande Hadlock Uintah Fred Allen Bear River Reed Stayner Davis LeGrande Gregory Davis Bob Cook Provo Keith Trane Lehi Dick Smith Payson Dan Gillies Mont Killian' Roosevelt Centers Jim Larson Ogden Nelson Walker Uintah Dale Hunt Monroe Grand Allred Snow Dale Hatch Davis Bob Dorton Lehi Ed Ure South Summit Jack Mitchell Lehi Curtis Hadlock Uintah Wayne Clark North Summit Boyd Bradshaw South Cache Bob Trump Davis Earl Cox Dixie Reed Nil-sen Provo Bob Nielsen Snow Milo Jensen South Summit Harold Timothy Roosevelt Don Hess -j-r 4 a 0ur 3 i 4 i play a double header against teams available second will be forced to demonstrate their claim to superiority by playing a team pomposed of seven opposing players against five Ghosts And a gigantic assignment never equalled nor even approached within our experience Red Wade has agreed to try his luck With a new teim of seven men against the Ghosts Red a great star in his own right has decided to pluck hisi aides from the ranks of the Weber college Intermountain A' A champions and several other outstanding basket performers well known locally The collegians are in the peak of condition having returned only this week-ead from Denver where they made a sensational showing against the best teams in the championship tournament of the Hational A A Uj It took the powerful San Francisco Olympic team to best the Weberites which they were able to do by the small 47-fco-45 margin in one! of the most thrilling games of the entire tourney I Phil Revell will hold down one of the forward posts £aptain Nof- ris Nelson was chosen at center and the third Wildcat picked Is Jack Thomas to perform in one of the guard stalls along with The Original Colored Ghosts look for ward to playing an unusiial double header at the new Ogden high school Saturday evening They will attempt something never before tried by a major team Big Red Wade will use seven talented hoopsters against the traveling troupe Pictured in the staff photo left to right: Pete Hood sure-hot artist Wilkinson stellar eut-up 1 Simmons world headliner of sport and matchless entertainer Graves baekeourt wizard Potts master of the dribble marathon 4 ft WILLARD Wysocki Leads In Bowling Tourney CLEVELAND March Jde Wysocki of Buffalo rolled Into third place in the allevents standings of the American Bowling congress tournament here today He scored 609 627 598 1832 First place held by George Yorke of Elizabeth with 1868 and second place by Charles Cahill of Norwood Ohio with 1861 Florida Club to Conduct Program SARASOTA Fla March 18 The Professional Golfers association through its president George Jacobus today announced the Ponte Vedra Golf club at Jacksonville Fla had been selected as the site for this Ryder eup matches The dates for the British-United States competition have not been set but will be sometime in November -F- Fish and Game GENE MOORE former Bee makes good in outfield 0 i-4 a It Charles' Mabey former direc-shine were right When the sun I Jii -yv wju 1 4 BROOKLYN TO NEW CLUB 5 7 '4 4 -v If Wade Seven-man Game is hardly expected to the nation by storm So fe are the teams that are clever enough to make this possible that Ogdenites had best see it now It -may never I Veterans Lazzeri come again i lineups for will show guards ancT TROT OUT BASEBALL The box score and the three forwards three To Help Immensely New Pennant Sewell In Race one center right forward left forward and middle forward back guard roving guard and roaming guard or something A high-class team with a good record throughout the jcurrent sea sort will be named frpm a dozen or so now under consideration it was announced This feature of the sports spectacle of the year will be told in these columns early next week The team has been tentatively decided uppn but formal okeh awaits word Williams from at £ioux City tor of thej Davis County Wildlife Federation reports having seen an albino robin in the vicinity of Sunset on Friday This would be quite a freak and worth seeing by anyone Outdoor Life has an article in the April issue telling of a trip to Utah by Roy BergmAn He is an expert fisherman and sportsman His articles appear in our National Outdoor magazine repeatedly He says of his trip to Ogden: Leo Poorman took me up the Ogden river cannon Leo is a great believer in sunshine and asserted that the fish in is river never took wrell except on a clear day He also preferred fishing with the sun at his back which was in perfect accord with my views method of fishing w'as to keep hidden as much as possible and use a short line so that in most cases nothing but the fly touched the water This is an excellent practice wherever it can be used as it certainly can in the Ogden river and many other streams thing about the Ogden river fishing was against all of my experience That was the prevailing opinion that you take trout from the slow-moving sections of the water because it was too clear Now this water is not nearly so clear as thousands of other trout streams suchj as Gallatin in Montana and thfc Never-sink in New York and in all these streams slow-moving waters have produced I tried it out and found that the still waters of the Ogden river also would produce trout when I cast a long line and used an extremely long fine leader But remarks about the sun By HARRY GRAYSON NEA Service Sports Editor CLEARWATER Fla Mareh 38 the same old Dodgers Pete Coscarart launched the exhibition game season by doubling into a no-hit no-run game neglected to touch first base on the only tiling that even faintly resembled a hit off Whitey Moore and Recruit Gene Thompson of the Cincinnati Reds Thn aghinst the Yankees Tuckler Stainback pasted what ap- was shining we caught trout when it shine we catch them In all fishing combine the knowledge of others with that of your own And then be backward about trying something else In this way you are bound to get satisfaction if not in fish then at least from the thriU of The second National Wildlife Restoration week March 19 to 25 will be observed throughout the United States by large number of local and national organizations concerned-with the future of natural resources The first annual Wildlife week was proclaimed in 1938 by President Roosevelt Among the groups participating were Four-H clubs Future Farm--ers Garden clubs Audubon societies junior chambers of commerce clubs Boy Scouts Girl Scouts and Campfire Girls Schools churches radio stations and newspapers gave general recognition to the cause of conservation during the week Sheets of 80 wildlife poster stamps including trees wildlfow-ers birds mammals and fish will be distributed by the National Wildlife Federation in conjunction with Wildlife week These stamps are from paintings by outstanding nature artists Returns from the stamps are for the support of state organizations and the National Wildlife Federation headquarters in Washington The week of March 19 to 25 will be National Wildlife week proclaimed so by the president of the United States During tiis week special programs and entertainments will be sponsored by the Weber Wildlife Federation to commemorate this occasion On Wednesday March 22 the federation will sponsor a Wildlife dance at the White City ballroom Special programs will be taken to the schools and civic clubs of the city Bear River peared to be a home run over the Some showmen those Ghosts! left field bleachers with Vito Ta No wonder they were named) the mulis on base The Original Colored Ghosts in Thrilling: Competition rlARCII 24 25 26 5 Your opportunity to see the most brilliant array of Oki artists ever brought together in western America! real claimed -a ground rule made it a double land while they were arguing arid in the confusion Tuck Stainback passed Tamulis as they rounded third base Everything continues to happen to the Daffy Dodgers yet their comedy may turn out to be entirely too subtle for the supposed National Iedgue leaders this trip There is a baseball saying now President Aldous Dixon aRpIay5f is en0gh to py with Brooklyn but this is only because Lelnd Stanford MacPhail did the highly intelligent thing of signing old Iblokes like Luther Sewell and Anthony Lazzeri as reservists makes it possible to Flatbush Fusileers in every department The Dodgers scarcely can be referred to as the Old Gentlemen from the banks of the Gowanus WEBER CO-EDS GAIN AWARDS Six Weber college co-eds Satur day were proud possessors of pinS presented them for their work in advancement of athletics in the school They are Helen Blood Marie Chever Donna Hogge Helen King Jube Scriven Irene Coombs They 'are Worn- counted out at this writing Hugh Casey and Russell Evans up from the Southern association! and Ira Hutchinson formerly of the Boston Bees look especially formidable Vito Tamulis husky southpaw won 12 games for the seventh-place Dodgers In 1938 Bill Posedel only has to master control This may be Forrest Pressnell's year Phelps Will Handle Bulk of Catching Like Mungo Wayne LaMaster Jim Winford and Johnny LaRoe-co seem to have rid themselves of arm trouble Durocher has no idea of giving! up on Kemp Wicker a southpaw discarded by the Yankees I Bill Crouch who reported late ace in tying Red Evans and the St Louis Tom Sunkel in leading the Southern association in Victories with 21 The gigantic Gordon Phelps a rousing hitter will do the bulk of the catching with Luke Sewell and Ray Hayworth in reserve Adolph Camilli gives the club a home-run hitter and a flossy fielder at first Coscarart a slick double Play 3rd Annual Sun Valley International Open Ski Tournament for ike Ilarriman Cup Downhill- and Slalom Events 1st Nalional Amalour 4-7ay Championship Cross-country Downhill Slalom Jumping gW maker with Durocher batted 315 for Nashville While he leaves considerable to be desired offensively Cookie La vagetto is adequate at third Goodwin Rosem who lacks pow er was the best Brooklyn fly chaser in 1938 He is now a reservist which gives you a fine! ideaof how far the club has come along in that department Tuck Stainback and Gene Moore the latter obtained from the Bees have center and right fields clinched while Ernie Koy and Fred Sington the Alabama alumnus fight it out in left I KANSAS WORKS IN GARAGE BUFFALO March 18 Rocky Kansas former lightweight champion has a job in the Buffalo City garage and i Athletic association officers I for average age of the regu athletic managers of college clubs rs is on5y (27 with the second and carticipants In Intramural basing combination providing the athletics I youngest and! oldest Leo Du- VoDey ball basketball swim- rocher at 32 and Coscarart 10 ming badminton ping Jong and his junior archery are among thel activities Mungp Show Promise of for which the awards were made "7 Forn? The presentation was made at the niade Durocher man A A annual banquet held in aer vrith eye to getting good the Jefferson Tea room JDr A years out of one of the finest de-Dixon made the awards £nd Irene ff nsive shortstops who ever played The top-flight skiers of the world will compete in this spectacular carnival Unforgettable thrills await you See these champions in action: Dick Durrance of Dartmouth out for his third win in the Sun Valley International Downhill and and permanent possession of the Harriman Cup Walter Prager famous Swiss racer and Dartmouth coach Friedl Pfeifer special racing coach at Sun Valley Ski School former chief instructor in Hannes Arlberg School in Europe and rated as one of the five best skiers in the world: Alf J-ts Sun Valley Ski Club entrant and holder of national AS distance jump record Ton Matt of Austria Reidar Ander-T son of Norway world champion jumper and downhill racer Heinz von Allmen an international champion and present coach at McGill University EVENT will be the most brilliant ever staged in this country Among those entered are Olympic Champions Marian McKean Betty Woolsey and Hannah Locke and champion Swiss team Nini van Arx-Zogg Erna Steuri Gritli Schaad and Barbara Bon miss this great three-day carnival Make your reservations now! Consult dnmumm Lippy Leo has his hustling like him- a wealth of fine The New Castle Film Service Exclusive at Kammeyer's a i -7 a home movie fans This tvf tal fllm service for 8 and 16 mm featuring films on 6 flnest home movie entertainment 1938 in Sports ara Come in for further detafj to? partics and £amily May! Just a Few of Our Spring Specials Flint and Onyx 20 to 50V Marbles In bags St IOC Roller Skates to $350 Tennis Rackets 1 95 to $1950 Tennis Balls 25 30 -45 Baseball Gloves $100 up Softballs Baseballs 25 to $200 sss S18 21th street Helen Blood is president of the association which was organized at the college in 1935 Beginning April 1 feminine arch-era at Weber will participate in a telegraphic archery meet! with all the junior colleges and universities in Utah This will be the first ch meet Weber has Entered DEER supply INCREASES WASHINGTON March A government survey reveals more Jr In the United States at the the game and noble athletes self Brooklyn has talent If Van Ling Mungo continues to throw with the same easy overhand delivery hat has characterized his warmups to date the erstwhile fireball kpig will quickly regain his old salary and position as the No 1 pitcher He easily could be the top flinger in the business Mungo shoula be ably assisted by Luke Hamlin Whitlow Wyatt Irwin 16 mm movie cameras only six left 1938 models Regular $1295 fmm Now special at Ol-SO Complete line of films earner projectors printing and developing service Oty Ticket Office Ben Lomond Hotel Phone 783 or 78i Office Hours: 8:30 a ni to 5:30 JOHN BAKER General Agent 31 0 24th Ume than there were wnen ths Indians had the run of and fat Fred Fitzsimmons cue woods And not one of 11 others can be -V ROAO Of the ano the ChalleMgetJ I.

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About The Ogden Standard-Examiner Archive

Pages Available:
572,154
Years Available:
1920-1977