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Show - j. r 1J 5 PAGE rFQUn P BO V 6- (U T A H),: E V EN J N 6 H E R AL D, M O N D AY.- -J A N U A R'Y 2 6. 1 9 3 I." V n. Wn Aggie A;.. I . To Recoup To Redskins Unbeaten Aggies Await B. Y. U. For Friday and Saturday Gaines; Utah Losses Were Heartbreakers; Champs Strong. A WEST fcttX DIVISION R. M. C ' Standljiff of the Teams: u-Ut"' W.' L.' Pet.' PU Owr toK' 4riH .4 0 1.000 143 1 trl. 4 2 .867 255 241 J. ,Yii U. . 8 Monti: State. .. 6 .500. .211.. 19 .000. .223.. 272 Schedule Jon. SO, SI. .-H. V U. vs. U. A.C at Lopan. v Smarting under the sting of two suocaaiive defeats Coach Ott Rom- ney'a"Y. 'Cougar invade Logan this week to have their fling at stopping the regime of the champion cham-pion Utah Aggies. To 1om one game by a single point.' and another one by two slim . counters, waa heart-breaking,' but the Cougars are determined that they will put up a terrific battle at Ijbgan? The double defeat at the bands of Utah places the ou-g&rs" ou-g&rs" as underdogs, but B. Y. U. hopes:,for a split In the Logan camp; "at least. They are fafr from out of;the running yet. Any body's Game Botiii of the Utah frays were "anybody's game." Utah produced ,the needed punch In the pinches of both i contests, and romped off with the. ball games. Superior shooting, with Lorraine Cox. Red Clark and Jerry-Smith doing the honors, was decisive when points meant ball games. " ' . .-The I Cougars were not consistent In either Utah game. The opener found the "Y" playing mediocre ball until a rally 10 minutes before tu close came within a hair of bringing, victory to the home team. n; the second game, B. Y. U. ap-parentry ap-parentry . had the game tucked ; away, -.but-failed toscore a single Held goal m tne rinai ten minutes of the second half, while Utah rallied ral-lied twln In the finul six. . ' Center was the weak spot In the -TY" team Friday - night, but Iuntf played stellar ball In the recontl engagement, his ability at taUinf in shots keeping the Cougars Cou-gars the running- throughout the flft half. Then, too, he kept Red jCk' fairly well in check the second night, and It was Clark's scoring, that proved the Cougars' downfall lh the Opening encounter. ;WUhAHfc detracting in the least fromUtah's excellent play, the HbugaTa aro capable of better bas-?eth83ithan bas-?eth83ithan they showed In the titan tussle. : When the Y" pass-Jng. pass-Jng. attack- Is clicking with fair ihooUrig;, It , offense la . second to Toone. iJBut, streak'iness In this de-pAHment de-pAHment means trouble, and the Cougars are not yet playing con-ristfot con-ristfot bair. ; Cooper's 'performance at ftuft-dv wasJ outstandingly good In the Utah series. Cobner d laved cpleftdidly in both -encounters. anf nevr quit fighting. Captain Russ Magleby came through ' with a sen-ttlonal sen-ttlonal performance in the opening open-ing gamer although he was hardly himself in the, second tussle, n Tremendous crowds at both fames -showed ' the interest of Pro-ya Pro-ya f any in the collegiate race this year. .The sole unpleasant incident raa the "raizing" of the officials, Warner, and Stewart. "While' this official combination makeVtts mts- t ikes,. there was no excufo.for the wildgapoing" that ftUri h recond nisrht s game fana rett to the point where UTAH AGGIES '-" WIN. 31-29 Bobcat Rally Cut Short By Final Gun in Second Encounter. Montana State made a ' great bid for victory against Utah Aggies Saturday night, but the champions made an early lead last them to the finish, chalking up a 31-29 victory. vic-tory. Aggies had a 20-14 lead at the close of the half, but after they had increased their lead to nine points, the Bobcats closed the gap, coming with! two points of their stalling opponents. Allsop and Parkinson of Aggies and Buzzetti and Worthlngton of the home team were the outstanding outstand-ing performers. The score: AGGIES O. T. F. P. Parkinson, f 1 2 1 3 Watklns, f 1 Belllston, c. . 3 Alsop, g 3 Drysdale, g. 0 Bennion. g 3 1 4 3 0 1 5 0 3 0 0 9 31 Totals 11 11 MONTANA G. T. F. P. Homme, f 0 I 0 0 Wendt. f. . . , 0 0 0 0 Facer, f . . . . 1 1 0 2 R. Buzzetti, f .4 3 3 U Booth, c ... 5 3 1 11 Arlo, g 1 3 1 3 yorthlngton, g 1 0 0 2 Totals 12 11 5 29 S. F. TRACKSTEK HURT ' SPANISH FORK Jack Swenson, AS, son of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Swenson, and one of the star athletes ath-letes at the Spanish Fork high school, recently suffered an accident acci-dent while practicing the hurdles which may put him out of the track meet this spring. He broke a bone in his right ankle. He was carried to the office of Dr. J. W. Hagen for treatment. Salt Lake Stock TEACHERS AND WYOMING LEAD Cowboys Tumble Boulder Without Difficulty; Pedagogues Peda-gogues Still UnGefeated. KASTERN DIVISION Standing of the Teams Colo. Teachers Wyoming Western State Demve Colorado Colorado College . Colorado Aggies 0 Colorado Mines 0 Tosses Timely i ; Ringers Twice DENVER, Colo., Jan. 26 MRh A full schedule this week brings all of the teams in the eastern division divi-sion of the Rocky ' Mountain i Basketball Bas-ketball Conference into action. Favorites Shifted Favorites shifted definitely over the week-end, throwing the race into in-to a three-cornered scramble. Three incidents featured last week's duels. They were: The University of Colorado's .double loss to Wyoming and consequent conse-quent slipping from immediate con-tendership. con-tendership. The threat of Wyoming, whose comeback apparently has installed It a team to be considered. The maintenance of" undisputed leadership by Colorado Teachers Wyoming games with Western State at Gunnison. The Normal team has a bunch of sharp shooters shoot-ers and has shown a passing game strong enough to keep the ball from the Cowboys. Colorado's shooting was somewhat of a disappointment in view of its Earlier playing. Members of the Silver and Gold team, however, suffered most of the week with a light flu, and were not at their best in either game with Wyoming. Week's Schedule The schedule this week: Tuesday Colorado vs. Mines at Golden. Wednesday Colorado College vs. Teachers at Greeley. Friday Colorado Aggies vs. Colorado Colo-rado at Fort Collins; Wyoming vs. Western State at Gunnison. Saturday Agglea , vs. Colorado at Boulder; Mines vs. Teachers at Greeley; : Denver vs. Colorado College Col-lege at Denver; Wyoming vs. Western West-ern State at Gunnison. f "v. - '"3 w. i. Pet. 4vv:; i- . 2 S .400 X ;,J 1,' 7 .. 1 2 41SS O , - " - V-r-v JERRY SMITH This accurate "U" basket marksman marks-man was the nemesis of the B.Y.U. Cougars in the two heart-breaking games of Friday and Saturday night. . Smith tossed in the winning field goal . in the extra period of Friday night's game, and did the same thing Saturday night to break a tie. and give the Redskins a two-point two-point triumph. SrJfTH LEADS SCORING ACES Jerry Smith of Utah jumped to the top of the R. M. C. western division -scorers last week with a total of 73 points. Red Clark, Redskin Red-skin center. Is close behind, with 72. Ry Buzzetti, of Montana State, the previous leader, boosted his total to 68 points, while Boothe-of the Bobcats has 67.. Cox, Utah forward, for-ward, is next in line' with 62. Elwood Romney of B. Y. U. has j garnered 61 points in four games, and Brinley 51. Captain Russ Magleby of the Cougars is far in front of all the scoring guards, with 39 points in four games. The summary: FORWARDS G. T. T. F. Pt. Smith, Utah 6 32 11 9 73 R. Buzzetti, M.S.C. ... 6 29 17 10 68 Cox, Utah 6 27 12 8 62 Romney, B. Y. U 4 28 7 5 61 Brinley. B. Y. U 4 21 20 9 51 Wendt. M. S. C 6 17 11 5 39 D. Watklns, Aggies . . .4 6 15 12 24 Parkinson, Aggies . Facer, M. S. C Drysdale, Aggies . . . Wilcox, Aggies E. Buzzetti, M.S.C. WestphaU,Utah Garn, B. Y. U Roblsonv B. Y. U. Harding; M. S. C. . West, Utah Ui Magleby, B. Y. U. Homme, M. S. C. CENTERS j Clark, Utah 6 29 19 14 72 1 Booth, M. S. C. ... . . . 6 28 16 11 67 World Champ Downs Malcewicz In S. L. SALT LAKE.CITY, Jan. 16 il'-D Don George, "Michigan wrestler who lays claim .to the heavyweight championship, was still the title holder today following a decisive victory Friday night over Joe Mal-:ewicz, Mal-:ewicz, Utica. N. Y. Flying tackles proved Malce-.wicz's Malce-.wicz's nemesis. Until George staggered stag-gered him with a tackle, Malcewicz A-as clearly in the lead. Once groggy, grog-gy, however, he was an easy mark. 4 4 4 3 5 5 4 3 3 1 1 2 2 1 1 1 2 2 0 0 0 0 9 5 2 3 2 3 0 1 1 0 0 0 5 15 3 13 1 9 PLEADS NOT GUILTY McKinley Cook of Provo entered a plea of not guilty when he was arraigned in the city court, Fri- lay, on charges of battery preferred prefer-red by Mike Petroff. The date of '.he hearing was set by Judge Maurice Mau-rice Harding for Feb. 5. Hunter, B. Y. U 4 17 10 2 36 Belliston. Aggies 4 16 3 1 33 Childs, Aggies 1 1 1 l 3 Nelson, B. Y. U 2 0 4 1 1 Sonne, Utah 1 0 0 0 0 " GUARDS R. Magleby, B. Y. U.. 4 14 16 11 39 Davis, Utah 6 11 15 6 28 Allsop, Aggies 4 11 8 6 28 Bennion, Aggies 4 9 10 8 26 Worthlngton, M.S.C. . 6 7 6 3 17 Al io, M. S. C. . . .6 5 8 S 13 Lybbert, Utah 6 4 10 5 13 Cooper, B. Y. U 4 4 6 3 11 Johnson, B. Y. U 2 2 0 0 4 Young, Aggies 1 1 1 1 3 Moesinger, B. Y. U. . . 1 1 0 0 2 Watkins, Utah 6 0 3 0 0 Bennion, Utah 2 0 0 0 0 Ballif. B. Y. U 1 0 0 0 0 Breeden, M. S. C 2 0 0 0 0 Hanni Is Victor In Wasatch Dog Derby Stover Is Nosed Out By Ashton Driver; McCoy Mc-Coy Takes Third Place; Engen Victor In Dangerous Ski Jumping. HUNTSVILLE, Utah, Jan. 26 (IIP) In the meantime, McCoy exper- Dogged persistence and a team ienced difficulty and was forced to that produced a winning burst of . fierht hard for third nla H fin. ! c v. a 4i . 1 .m final oAslv rvo . . i I W .1 . . . ma of:v uh me imai ouiw-u isiiru une minute ana av seconds Dean Hanni, 19, Ashton, Idaho, vie-! ahead of B'red Printz, Portland tory over more experienced oppon-; Such favorites asj Earl Kimball ents in the 55 2-10-mile Wasatch cascade, Idaho, ana Mrs. ThukT dog derby in the second annual Qeelan. San Francisco finished far winter sports carnival yesterday. down the list aAlf( Enfen' Vfah Ski, club' won ! Ski jumpers risked serious injury the two-day ski jumping contest yesterday. The Becker Hill sllae-under sllae-under hazardous conditions. , said to be lhe ,onffest natural skl At the start of the last half 25 slide In the world was hard pack-miles pack-miles of the dog dei-jy yesterday ; ed and icy. Two skiers were sent Hanni was in third place. Roy to the hospital and seven or eight Stover, Sacramento, held riist place j others were shaken up and Gil McCoy. Reno Nev second Natlonally famoua skifra gucn aj Hanms team first fought it out , Haugen, Lake Tahoe, seven with McCoy Time ana again the times national champlon and TedV Ashton youth drew close only to j Rex , Detroit present champi on were fall back as the Reno entry spurted. nardlv ,n thp rnnnln On the fifth lap, Hanni forged ! ahead ! From that time on it was a thrill- ing duel between Hanni and Stover. ; At the start of the final lap Stov- j er was leading by a margin of 43 ' seconds. Hanni drove his team ! hard, pulled even with the Sacra j mento veteran and crossed the fin- ' ish line 31 seconds ahead to the acclaim of cheers Irom a crowd of 6,000. Engen, whose jumps of 16fl and 200 feet gave him second place Saturday, Sat-urday, negotiated leaps of 181 feet and 190 feet Sundav to take first ;ilace. Charle XV. Smith. of Omaha. Neb., inspector of shop standards for the Union Pacific system, Was in Pruvo Saturday oh business. 0 &m fofFS v ply y Or, i a BERG AND SHEA .V Says PEL JAvuIlS Ac POJMAS Commissioner of Public Health, Lynn, Mass . QUOTATIONS As Furnished By WELLS L, BRROTALL ; . . Broker I ii FTGHT VICTORS1 " , MONDAY, JANUARY 20, 19S1 Big Hill Cardiff .......... Central Standard Chief Con. Colorado Con. . . Combined Metals Crown . Point . . . ; every 'decision that called a foul? on- B. Y U.srhether or riot It was perfectly, obvious. Coad&mX ney's call for sportsmanship .was. J r.dhered ito. and was wefdmearbVf every real basketball fanj f I .-i niuiuujii me iwu uves were discouraging to the "Viprlsl certainly: everyone jejtpriencedj tbrilla galore In the exciting" tWcH game, set, which migh hive jturn4 wvuer way in eacn insuincc. A fries Looking Great . H I Aggies are sitting on top o( the heap, with four victories and liarV - a de feat. ) Montana State ujmlshed. usanues wun plenty of competition, com-petition, as expected, but could not quite ' tumble the fighting cham-ploni, cham-ploni, . who . scored four and two-point two-point victories. The champions ap-parenUyhave ap-parenUyhave the same methods ca i last tyear a never say die ag-gresKiysness, ag-gresKiysness, and exceptional ball-nisUlngeblUty. ball-nisUlngeblUty. The scoring power of the Aggie guards has been an outstanding feature.- Stiff dHlla are in erdeHSa Week beofPU the- Cougars , head for the ull-lmportant Logan series. Dlx Butte Dragon Bast Standard E. Tin. Coal . . . East Tin. COn. . Emerald Empire Mines . Eureka Bullion . Eureka Lily . , . 'Eureka Mines .. Great Western Irtn 'King'..... Little May -Mammoth, .i,,.,.. New Premier, Nw.Quncy J North Lily Nqr StandaHl . . . . .Ohio Capper;. . . . 'Park' City. Con. . Park' Nelsoh Park Premier ; ; . Park Utah . ... kPlutus .......... Pr,ovp ..,. SHvef King Coal Silver Shield Sioux Mines So. Standard ... . Tlntic Central . . . Tlntlc Lead-Tinic Lead-Tinic Standard .. Utah Con. Walker Mining . Yankee Con; v... Zuma Sales Combined Metals 1000 R 9'ic. Lehi Tin. 9000 f c. Park City Con. 200 & 20c Tlntlc Lead 400 ?i $1.05. Tlntlc Standard 100 0 $4.20. ;Mrr Rulonr BandJey of Burlsy Idaho, is vlslUng InJPiW with her parents. -Mr.W Mrs. D. D. Sutton. v- 2 -WEALS, DAY, PLENTY VVATER, HELPS STOMACH "StnfibI 'drink Vnlenty .'water, eat 2 good meals a day, and take -Xd-' lerika now. and ;then, I've bud ho t itiuble with .my tomach."C- De- Forestt " - '... " - ' Unllkev"oher medicine, Adlerika acta ofa; BOTH '.upper C. and lower bowel,?. removing poisonous ' waste which caused 'gas' and other stom-cch stom-cch trouble. ' Just ONE. spoonful relieves gasr sour stomach and sick : -xdache, 'i- Let Adlerika give -your :mach and bowels a REAL- clean- Z and' see how od-yeA'Jfeei; II- $ .29 $ 24 .03 .05 .01 .02 .54 .60 . .01 M .02 .09 .09 .02 , .03 .07 .08 .04 .07 . .00 .06 .12 .28 .34 .04 .06 .05 . 0 .22 .20 22 -OOfi; .01 , .01 -.05 i4 .20 .00 .00 .00 4i 2Q . .25 .; .15 .23 ' .03 .0334 1.02 1.10 .01 .02 .20 . .35 .19 .21 .06 ; .07 .05 .08 .07 .08 1.50 1.55 .18 .35 . .20 .25 5.40 5.60. .01 .02 .00 .01 .10 - .11 m .04 1.05 1.10 4.10 4.20 .00 .02 1.67 1.70 .00 .02 .03 .03 The Rev.' Cv A. Duncan, Newport, Me., was awarded a varsity letter for playing footbalf 40 years after he had left collage. u . After' Inventory SALE! Watch for Our Ad OVER $200 WORTH OF, MERCHANDISE 1 GIVEN AWAY FREE! : ' ' ' 'LEWIS ' -;: LADIES' STORE CHICAGO. Jan. 26 (U.l!) Jack (Kid) Berg and Christopher (Bat) Battalino retained ranking J today as world champions In the junior welterweight ,and featherweight divisions., di-visions., respectively, but whereas the little Briton was a champion in eve'ry sejise of the word; Battalino Batta-lino was ruler In name only. Berg reaffirmed his supremacy by. decisively defeating Goldie Hess of California In a 10-round , championship cham-pionship bout at Chicago : stadium Friday night. s" Battalino, appearing on the same card, failed to win a single round of his ten-round encounter with Eddie Sheae of Chicago, but retained re-tained his title by insisting that his opponent enter the ring a ta poundage above the featherweight limit. Battalino's exhibition was a sorry sor-ry performance for a champion, and the little Hartford, Conn., Ital ian left the' ring amid jeers and boos from the 12396 spectators who paid a total of $35,127.75 to see the show. RARE COFFEE WINS COUNTLESS NEW 'USERS BY FLAVOR Amazing Popularity 4 of Hills Bros.' Coffee Tribute to Roasting Process e "Years of experiment by Hills .Bros, have resulted in the origination, origina-tion, and perfection of the only Controlled Roasting process in use today. i By Hills Bros." patented process, the " degree of roast is positively controlled. The -quantity of coffee passing into the roaster about three pounds at a timedoes not vary.: The speed of the flow and the temperature remain the same, with : the result that Hills Bros. Coffee is absolutely uniform. .This roasting? method' is to a large le-srree-responsible 'for the freauent . question. Why is . Olills . , Bros., 4 txiuq always ine samei-. ' - Comparisons show . that Hills Bros., Coffee has flavor no- other coffeeJhasi Thefc ordinary a method of roasting, in bulk cannot insure a tmiform roast because, there is a lack of control.'' - - - ; . ' ' The vacuum can, m which Hills Bros, Coffee is packed, keeps the coffee fresh. !' Air; . which destroys the flavor of coffee,' is completely .removed from the can and kept out. Coffee does not; stay fresh in ordi nary -cans, even if airtight. - Ask for Hills, Bros. Coffee by name and look for the Arab the trade -mark onl the : can. Sold by. grocers everywhere. -1 - v .'" .Hills Bros. Coffee, Inc., Denver, .Colorado, ; .' .11t;, : CWM '". " ? X ' 'jt' ,ePARTME! l . I960. .rioa., Ci6 Company. IS city. Getrtlement- teamed to lAfi.sant ordj there of oorC likeliod of mi iis vori. coyotes.; I am, the refori adve . -t in yww ,.int the -r" M flttln6 . YOU -V. 00ar"i jttWi'"1 . truly, Corraaissioner A ono of 56 health officials from 56 different points approvingCremo'scrusado against spit or spit-tipping t Every smoker, every wife ivhoie husband smokes cigars, should read Dr. Dumas9 letter. "Who are the f riends of 'Spit?" YOU MAY WELL ASK THIS QUESTION WHEN 56 IMPORTANT HEALTH OFFICIALS HAVE WRITTEN SO STRONGLY AGAINST THE EVILS OF SPIT OR PIT-TIPPING. Dr. Dumas writes: "The ever-present ever-present possibility of infection from heed less spitting habits is most vital in any consideration of health maintenance." The war against spit is a cms ado of decency. Joinir...Smoko Certified Cremo a really wondorfuj smoke mild mellow nut- sweet! Every loaf ontering tho clean, sunny Cremo factories is scientifically treated by methods recommended by tho United Statos Department of Agriculturo. In this period off ' Ijj I :., WW JV II r oiid cracked tips, above all Insist 5a-S ' on a clear -free i of the tplt fcrrnHk; r d A! 2 -J Jj? liSI Aauriua Cigar Co. - - .v. ,i, A 3'..--:. . '"l v - |