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Show "- TV--- vv.. V t ! ' ... T A U s ' '.-v .. I ' .,- j . PACT FOtJR "4. 'J TCD --, -, Driver "Escapib J Hus If? Crash f - ins 12 Cougars To Make 7C6iraa JknsUnror:: i. , 7rr.:rn r 7X1......... , i i ..4 -v. f'w. Tjgcaro, Koss, lniffnt ana 'ijaer oyiuns lfii366d;,Fofeiaa ' TIY DONA1HJE J NKA. Service Sports Writer -?rwo J little if elteM -and two big , fellers ftil youham! good fighters, 1 . haL yaited tKelr dogs firmly tn tfeat&s 6.th kingship of th:r dlvfeibnsrand -there: they are,, four t guyf 'o'Jl . have, to ' be licked Lto diVTIdnr chanripions before' man mooriW have waned. " : - Itwovha1f-artins?are Bab .rrfiflcro, fvelana8Tt5hertitrt; f ," weight,, and Barney Bos; Chicago's , UoTtfng'aghiweight; 7 n - ! .Tfn'QVitwP JargesUes .are Maxie EMf.f Uvermore, Calif ., butcher 1 txi,1 heavyweight, about whom ' yxuvv'ye fio. doubt licard in ihe last - tli'roc or f 6ur y eara and Joe Knighl, Cairo, Ga.,, light' heavy contender. V - Tgitf -' two kittle genta-are producls of GoldchGlovea.eilmihation bouts. D.th Triscaro and Ross won tne national amateur featherweight . HiiCf Triscaro in 1931, Ross in iy29 CjSTnite of an Italian kid, Tris-r-actv-just 19, has been fighting pro-, femionally only a bit over.a year. Yet in 18 bouts his whirling dervish , ntlack,'- w?th gloves flying, every-Vt-here, a taken him to 17 vlctor- . llr.In his amateur career he won Ojftimtt of 69 bouts. Today, - at 23, Ross probably is Ufc ;twst dangerous contender for . Tony. Canzoneri's title. In the last three years he has had 39 pro bouts, winning 16 by knockouts and 22 Ly decisions. One of his greatest figh:3 wiar wu,a one-sided conquest of IM- Battailno, former feather IPer Conies" Back Ojthe,;.two big. members, Bacr , pf9Ay.U the best known-rf,6r his -fjghtingtJwith Jjanda.and mouth. Outside m of Sha rkey , Maxle U rrtjfebJ3f themost garrulous ptmth-r ptmth-r in' the' ring itoVlay, but he punch-AwliK;ttahand8; punch-AwliK;ttahand8; just about jts welas , with Ills jaw. " :7 VTbta Ttall, ' good-looking ; Jewish . tp: from-:therat, who punched ptgs'. .on a b ranch ' of his butcher ' father, before he, took up punching aJ-utnUebumsriiv a- ring, is only 23 And, In three .or four, years of figni-in figni-in g Jaa' whipped a-lot of good boys. , "HC had.a iiiee'string of'khbck-oiis of'khbck-oiis 'whi8 fijNt trip htfth)4Spt 1929 and' I93(h But his cockineis - got the best of him and he 'dropped out of the picture. Back Again v;His sendcroeback.iwa4. clima- td by hla recentknockbut pf Tuffj , Griffiths in. Chicago. It waa Baer's . eleventh, straight victory. If r paer can - kcep -hiafightingr up and his r- cockiness, down, hell .tangle , with , Sharkey soon rUhe can corner the Gabby',CS$prand probably, win- . '.They; say JoeKnight is an un- known;. that -he'd, -get no -place in - there" with Maxie RosenbloomBut -llet- it ' besatd- thar George, a 23-t 23-t year old socker, has already licked ;V.thiboyV ' ' ' . J '"iv ecji j yoiif i eyes on -these - .four ; bOys-twO" small sizes and' two- big .'oiics1 ''J'heyll be in championship '.tussle's 'before long.- - - - i BATTERY.MS FROM CLEANERS : That the gun ! more powerful than th sponge was proved. Saturday Satur-day night when the Bmttery F basketball" eani beat the Rrovo Cleaners in a fast-game 45-J7, at the Armory .Saturday nightf. The Cleaners'led all the wiy until thei fourth .'jie'riod wnen the army boys - forged - ahead - to make their 8-point victory. . The score at the half, was ' 19-18 in favor of the Cleaners. V Scoring was divided rather evenly even-ly among .every man on both teams, with Johnson of the army leading with 12 points. Iman Hales, Cleaner Clean-er forward, Jed' their scpring.with 10 points. The teamwork on both outfits was smooth for the most part. The score: BATTERY Johnson, f . . . Call, f Kartchner, f , Johnson, c Rowley, tS Wixdm, g F G. T. F. F. 6 ,.0 ,.0.11. ..3 0 ..2 0 .3 1 . 4 2 ..3 2 0 0 1 1 1 Totals 21 5 3 45 Hales, f Madsen, f . Bigler, c . , Gillespie, c Dallin, g . Alger, g ... Totals . . PRO VP CLEANERS 5 4 3 2 4 O 0 0 0 2 . 0 0 1&- 2 O 10 0 8 0 6 0 4 1 9 0 0 1 37 Referee Kartchner, -Wixom. Timer and Scorer Hathenbruck. (rsr Collide But ; Ir. . Stanley L Clark-ta) .North Fouxth' Eastland J FJStewart, i -FairViewj f escaped lnjjuryt Friday .aftornonrwhem their leaf is; collided , ;.ai th Intersection, of Second North t and .TlUrdWest; . . . . t : -' 7 Ctj i kwas"lngwest jba Second r-Ncrih- hd Ctewartw Teceding myjit . . v ' 4iim ' . t vV'. V Vi7 the .siifB7slow. according 'W -, f t DrtiHYen3ircevrT;mer;fvjuo ' - T:ieetioik'-officeiimvbetl'lfeld i. xn meeting ot the K. of . Pi this r afS016ck;jne fcf P: .j i.t Ay nrremoers. areurgeorja. i -. r'Hb "y " , . 7. f -ii - ; " - 'a nf if Christmas Tree Cutting -Limited Requests 'for Christmas trees in the Wasatch national -forest" this yea frjro; ginevtp depig-nated depig-nated areas in the Uiflta mountains moun-tains ' in Beaver creek and along the Provo river road, it is an nounced by A. G. Nord, supervisor, Permits for these trees, which are almost exclusively Alpine fir, may be obtained through the for est ranger at Kamas. The policy of the forest service is to allow the cutting of young trees only where their - removal will result in desirable thinning to improve conditions of' growth for the remaining' trees. A tag is fastened fas-tened ' s to , each . tree , .bearing a Christmas message. No trees " will" be cut from the national forest land on the Salt Lake bity watershed, except those in. demand. 'for public purposes. The timber of the Wasatch mountains moun-tains was so fully cut over In the early settlement of the country and later damaged by fire to such an extent that" thCA objects" of forest for-est management have been that of rehabilitation. .. once . ' t$0Mm& X; X-W O j!.Wl-l v.v--.vM---,-)..'-'-y?'W . : il " ' " ' - - - qy-. : a ". ' i ' i, v;. ,,' i, m . I - : un Dismisses School Board-Case Charges of raaifeasapce In office lodged agafast thePiroYO district schopl. board seyeral months ago by County;, 'Xtprney; I. , E Brocktank were disintssed 1 on', the ' recommendation recommen-dation ;of j4r.l.Brockbanfcin" the Fourth .district 'court' 8aturday. r :The. vhite-tayed agle is one-of the few ' birds which mate jfor life and Ut' sometimes lives as long as 100 yearsu- ,. - - ' . ( Jr., 1 Ql Salt Lake Stock Exchange Aa Furnished By WELLS L. BRI3HIALL Broker BY. NAT HOLMAN Star Flayer, Coach aad Author of "Winning Basketball" . Q. Do yon approve of working many plays from the tip-off doling the course of a game? . . A. Plays must not - be depended upon to win basketball 'games because be-cause they cannot be completed successfully against all teams. If, however, a team is getting the Jump with regularity and it- is found that thje : defense of bje ; op-; posing team l.jno strtfng, enough to cope with vibe-plays , offered,- I see no reasdnV why- tjiey should not be worked with sufficiaht frequency fre-quency torun dp a substantial lead. Here is a sample play from tip-off. tip-off. The left forward gets the ball from center, and ' passes to left guard .who., pwses-either' to light forward or rts gad2.'lfC;i?oi'i ward , comes tfcc& W,'tfM.;'poft-' uon. . r CASBkcbNTINUEt The case" of , Byron LaQibson; arraigned; ar-raigned; In the city court Safurda y oii a fraudulent checlC chaigi, was contlnue4 $ indefuiUefy, fejr Judge Maurice Harding. Lambadn , Wa released ' on jlOO- bail; : ; He"" Was charged With having Issued a.fra ud ulen t ' check' 6 Albert Nlelsbn on September T in th ainount of $7.60. The first City to iret its : iMvferammitiii 'ii&Atitwnt.tA (f a saneevel; will -be; the tirst citato 'it- A' V.from an hYpir In cratlor , ! X NX J HCHARD. V v " A M -' ... ,V park, and, McCulloih ; Comedy - 1 M U y U h v .Cartoon V ; J M ARILYI, I,7;0VLDNvjJ!!v Vi :Sfcr j ; MONDAY, DEC. 12, 19S2 Alta Con . . , . .00 $ Big Hill-. .05 Cen. Standard JWU Chief Con. ........ 2 Colorado Con. . i . .00 Crown Point . . . .01 Crescent Eagle .IVT;f .01$l Combined Metals . . .02 M Dix Butte . . . .. Dragon . -. . i-Eureka i-Eureka X.ily Empire Mines E. Crown Point East Tin Con. East Tin". Coal. .'. J East Utah Empire Mines .... Eureka Bullion ... Eureka Standard M Great Western Horn Silver . Iron King Indian Queen . Little May . .. . Mt States Pet Mammoth .... Moscow ... r . New Quincy .. North Lily No. Standard ; . . . Opohongo Park Bingham Park City. Con. . . Park Utah Park Nelson ...... Park Premier Pluius .... Provo .... ...... Sacramento ' . . . . . Silver King Coal . i So. Standard Tar Baby ....... ii Tintic Lead Tintic 'SUndard , Victor Con.- ........ Walker Mining ... Yankee Con. ...... ZumaV.'.l.i-. .01 .08' ' :o2 JOOY .21 .05 .01 .02; - .08 WO .wr 1.50 .03 .00 .00 .01 .12 .04 .01 .T-25 . ;00 .01 , .06 . .92 . .01 , ,04 , .10 .06. - 2.40 2.50 .07 - .10 JSO , 2.7 .OG i; JD5 j4 f my .07 ' m .03 .03 .o4F; .06' .05 .00 J03 .22r, .10 ' m .04; .10 15 J&L, 1.75 , .09" .66 .01 .02 .20 .05 .02 .27, JX) . .60 .02. ..OS . .,99 .05 .05 .25 .10 i:".12 -2.2S .50 SALES - North Lily 200 - 25c.. - Park CiQr Con 500 7a. Sacramento 1000 lc Walker 500 0 80c. OTHER SECUBITUgS Anaconda-r-8. ' r Am. Telephone107. riSSWel3S;-v E. B. & Shares 20;, . VAs Si Refriilng-i3 Faith In Fay's Winning Habits By NiSA Service ANN ARBOR, Mich., Dec. 12 Harry Kipke, Michigan Wolverine football coach, views the- election of Stanley Fay as captain of the 1933 squad as a good omen. Fay, it is reported, has never played on a losing team either in h,igh school or. college. During his three years in high school his team was beaten only once. Last year he played on the Michi gan eleven that, tied with Purdue and Northwestern for the Big Ten title, and this year helped the Wolverines win undisputed posse sion of the honor. Short Shots At . s , . - rts Spots ;-John'A. Materi,'31l Bast 'First South, SpringVille, took the-f alter nativo of smashing into the rear nd of a parked trdck onthe highi.' way by the" : steel .'plant,) Friday night, rather .than rtk J- -beadon collision with a car coming south, in .which Dell. Mortensonr nd.'Neal ChrUtopherfiOtf of Spanish Fork MaWters wa driving north i oh. Che highway when the trvek,,lack- ing lighN and gas and parked on hs side of theu road, loomed, up in front of himJost.as'ihe car driven? by the' Spanish Fork men was coming past thm truck. T i ' Ray Van .Wagenen, driver of . the5 stalled . Pacific Fruit Express truck, told Deputy Sheriff J. P Oourleyt that i he had-i pulled the . truck of f . tnov road, ana that if It were in the road it must have Ijeen moved. No one was injured, but Master' Mas-ter' car was smashed in front.- (Continued frpm "Pi? 'Ona) spins a- webwbetw3een-)tre- hands pf the clocks The hands seporatet and tear the web tOiPieces. i The spider spins again, ifeelinsr. sure that soon er or .later those bands, must - get ' As ; it, jsnins the -spider breaks down sw3L absorbs tissues -of -its own- ooqy, navinc nomine .io eai. .It is.cettinc weak, will soon die. .juet us i nope tne, depression sp wer thati for. three years has oeer sptn- iiing 'lg web and holding", back the '.hands jof American induytrj' in ..Zj .is-: - ' ; - TV 1(1, SWII U1C. , . - . -- : Nine JMfen- Already Have Inside Track For Positions On Traveling: Squad; Rom- a; ney To-Choose Others. , "HAIVAtfD ASTBOSlICrAL oHervaj.ory oiaue ftKvgnapus, first ever ', madej of the JJeonid meteors that, fell last monrL,rThey contain calcium,, essential etfement iu building human bort,; aiidrron, eehtat tp blood1 as calciutri' is to bone. Without Iron your 'blood could not . carry from your ' lungs to the trillions of cells that make up your-body the oxygen and electricity elec-tricity thai they must have. These meteors, carrying life's, necessities, probably also brought here life itself, the first that this planet ever knew, depositing Life germs in' the ocean, jwhence, they spread -to-land and air, as climatic and atmospheric conditions permitted, per-mitted, 'finally .producing, proud man," - ' t - ' , rt - STUDIES AND COACHES s The coach ot the basketball , squad . of Duquesne university, Pittsburgh, Charles R. Davies, is enrolled in the school of education, and is signed to teach basketball jOXl til. Jie i. graduated in 1934. CUT WAIVER PRICE . Directors of the Pacific Coaot league have voted to cut the player waiver price rrom uw 10 iou. QUITE A PASSER Douglas Nott, sophomore ha";r back on thevUniversity.of Detroit's eleven tht year, threw 37 passes in two games 26 - against Michigan State aft'd II againBt Or?gPn Stale V-and only "one was intercepted. . 1 ' ' rr- ' CSO TIIATS " TIIE .REASON Purdpe's football: team is called the "Boilerrnakers' bfecause the Xa- layette, Ind., , school, had. the .first testing grounds for locomotives. f TOOLATE FOR' ) CLASSIFICATION I -r - : FOUND MAN'S Ice skate. Inquire at Her- aid". Pay . for ad. dH ; WAVtK.n MISCELLANEOUS FlRST'class milch cow. inquire of .Kar) Johnson. 1443 W. 6th So. dl8 TUES; -: WEDi iJHUR. mm ' t a V 5' '; t' ! TRUE SEX FACTS urn ji Tltl 'r ' - Sporty Apartments, Pleasure S.eeki i -ing, '. Unwarned of the Pitfalls of Passion Xs th- Youtb dLToday ,oh .', the Downward ;Path- of r Disgraci ; Gift Toting1 WA r ft Free-Loving : Maidens 'Sacrificing ; Virtue and Health In Their, Search' t.for New Thrills V and Forbidden, Pleasures! ;-.' r 1 Honor & "Virtue Lost In the Pitfalls of Gin and. Jaiz! . ' LOVE-.PASSTON . " YourlDaUghtcr filay Bd'Ncxtt See ,Scarlet' Daughters and; Profit: Tjv Its Ilarelr.but Unforeetablo Due, to Its ; Daring ,T..h e m lositlvdy ItctMii rtt ended Tor v Hearst News s r ' NOrCHILDREN i ; 1 .UNDER fHE;; COPPER IS PRODUCED coLed as thin as ordinarV paper, costing so . little . at . today's copper prices that gigantic quantities of it should be" used: It will keep out moisture, rats and other-vermin, and will be used to a great extent in. building when building is resumed. When L J. . ' Horowitz. v with Schultze and Weaver for architects, built .the new Waldorf Astoria hotel in New York City, under, 'every floor, fireproof concrete, he put -a layer 'of copper, to make leakage impossible. Thenew "Jcopperv paper", that can do that using one tenth the amount 'of copper, should figure, hereafter in-every well con structed building. , Brighant " Yeung university ' basketball bas-ketball players will this 'week swing into the; practice which will smooth off the rough edges in preparation for ; the , Colorado t In-J vaslon of the next two weeks -ana which will aid in choosing the rest of the season's squad of 14 and the 12 olavers who 'will make the trip The first contest on the trip are a pair of games with Western State college at Gunnison "on Friday Fri-day and Saturday. i ' . With more, than 20 men showing up consistently in practice and with approximately the same number num-ber having a ' great- record in the first alumni 'games last week thy Uik of picking but a squad" is no emipie task. Nine Assured So far nine men. seem assured of a. place on the squad of 12 which. will make the Colorado trip, according ac-cording to word, from Coach Rom-ney-. Monday t morning.. Elwood Rjomney,' George Gourley . and Whit Ball, forwards; Byron Nelson and Emerson McOmber, centers; and Jim Hunter," Hugh .Cannon, Mal colm LeSueur and Jay Whitman, guards, a"re 'the 'men who have shown such 'stuff as ' tower enough above the other members of the fast outfit to be chosen al ready. Ferd Evans," Lehi flash, will not make the trip but it is definite that the big guard will be a member of the season squad of 14 ; men. Hardward Looks Good ' Len Harward and Wesley Atkins are the two other guards, one- of whom will probably be chosen foi the trip, depending somewhat on their showing this week. Harward seems to have the inside track at present. Five forwards have been playing play-ing ball of a class that is bringing them into serious consideration for squad membership and three of them wil lbe taken on the ' trip, Floyd Millett and Buke Robison, both of whom started late due to football duties are two of these five men who are looking good. Joe Johnson, whose floor work has "brought him into prominence despite de-spite a flurry of poor shooting, may vercome hia- medio re shooting habits in time to make the trip Fay Evans, a veteran of last year's Seattle taw Say j I Cover tou the. Knee ! . -7 ' Tn SeatUe. .Wafih.- an old city ordinance Is still on the 'bobks forbidding for-bidding ' anybody ?td " go" Wthing without a bathing suiOTit reaches bdow thekneesT'J ' ' ; . ' - While" We're ori the sSjbJect of rlnthlntr. ' tak a 1o8k' at 'Kansas. with its state law Vegujatlhg the length of shirt taHs. And the town of Good land, Kansas, "prohibits automobiles cn-themteln street. Listening- in on a- party 'phone is punishable by fine-' and Imprisonment Imprison-ment in Nevada. MieWgao forbids justices of the peace to hold coui t in barrooms. Wonder if thfs ap-plies ap-plies to speakeasies1,-too? -: - ina tharnever beforei Alfhough Fay i3 fast bis- efatiff playing may squeeze him' out Of A chance to help barnstorm Colorado. . Floyd Hotter, Hot-ter, the fifth man,' is a" flashy, play er and showed up to. advantage in the ; game with uMt alumni ' last week. If Kotter can team more effectively with tbereu of the Cougars Cou-gars he may- burst into the traveling travel-ing squad. . '. The Colorado schedule follows: December lft-17: Western State at Gunnison;, December 19 and 20: Colorado Teachers at Greeley; December De-cember 21: 'Piggly, intermountain A. A. U. champs, at Denver; De-cenrbet- 22amif 2."-3elorado Gplh. leee at 'Color add Springs. -The Henry Clothiers will be played in squad is showing. a. lot more stam- Provo on January 5. This inventlpn, which should stimulate the' use of copper comes opportunely wbett coppe r men face ;'jM&u?iUnftljid tflpuC ' with "pricea toWitrtWnn bvaW . "V- ir - mmaaeam f iw-Wiciesimsr,, 5 - 3; trrinvf "' 1ITTT? T? V . IIUItllYj MjASX Z . DAYS I- TIR.AMA to' Nake'ynH cheer t PUIECTION i ? -A Performance h tjMke r mar. J r,Walt6rvIIustiW 7? VCirtootf 'A -V 9 . v ' - - r . '-.v-----w ustrin?V screen eeaveaim ,! J.-lfead'lWwV,7 .'y WEDNESDAY J llerhfrt tirarft1t W V M''iv;Cnarleay i I J T1.' Sari iMarftka, Tomo frow s THE NEW FLArXSPUN 1 Broadcloth SHIRT en-55 Xhis S$hirtri8 Made of "T x Linen ahdBrqaaclotIir Because IfoiTontainlMefc it will' come back Jfpm the laundry . looking Jikfe other fabrics would like to look. Jt will give you amaziiig' wear and a luxurious feeling. , Because it Contains Broad y liQfft itUl drajpemooM .tiT'Ti1 fir " :r irZf 1 t i-v V AliCOXiORS . 'i MM u.,t ; ; , ; Style Leadership : r 7. , -I - ' - "Toirorrci- c ' z-''t , 1."'- L ' 'vT'r' i a n |