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Show Y tROVO (U-T AH). EV.ENIKG. ELB R A'V.UE S;D. AY, - MAR CH ; 1;7, 136 PAGE FIVE' tv- .i in ni'-i i inn ii tsfos 11 Jl Jl JU&: i TH ' -4 - Simmons Announces Provo High Squad American Fork, Nephi and Provo Represent Region in State Meet; All Seniors On Bulldog Tourney Squad Three high-geared teams from ful and exciting contests of the Region Three will travel to Salt first round. Dixie's lineup is said Lake City Wednesday, determined , to be one of the most formidable to bring - back the state high I since Elwood Romney and" Lor-school Lor-school basketball championship to raine Cox brought fame to the central Utah for the first timeJ-uthern Utah school, moo C : Sarne Type Ball it. The tournament runs four days. Ui,,i"u" i cnmpion, PiayS:inl Liu)j first round; Ne- pill, I U C X V. iAJ ! champion, e n - counters iNorin Summit at 6:30, and Provo, the Region Three runner-up, ciasn- Coach Simmons es with a highly touted team of Dixie Fliers, at 9:30, the feature game of the day. The Dixie-Provo game is expected ex-pected to be one of the most color- Provo's Theatre Beautiful! 'RoseMarie THEY LOVE YOU! So We'll Just Have To Say HELD OVER THAT ALL PROVO CAN THRILL TO "ROSE MARIE" and "INDIAN LOVE CALL" Sung by Jeanette MacDONALD NELSON EDDY EXTRA POP EYE CARTOON PARAMOUNT NEWS , Positively Ends TOMORROW! Feature at 1:00. 3:10, 5:25, 7:30, 9:10 THURS., Mar. 19, ONE DAY ONLY! ON THE SCREEN The Happiest, Scrappiest Picture of the Year , . MMMM with JUNE LANG - THOS. BECK Shows Continuous from 1 p. m. Matinee 25c, Eve 35c, Kids 10c Starts FRIDAY! FIVE BIG DAYS! ouinrupiETSs -DOuDu JEAN HERSHOIT tad brilliant Hollywood tst Ifcf ATVi -CvT CHARtlE MACK OX pnn. lj kn V0 AMYW Of ntvvt rjatSmctj A , 1 CITY ) ( Acts oi 1 vplatcoys IA Vaude J damp Jm. same type of ball as does Provo, a fast-breaking offense with a man- for-man checking system. This always provides colorful basket ball of the type interesting to watch. The Dixie squad of Coach Lee Hafen includes a group of tall and accurate performers Snow, Pickett, Faucett, Milne, McArthur and Tobler being the big guns. Provo has a fairly large team, also, al-so, fast and possessing a really erood offense and an effective defense, de-fense, with Peterson and Allen as the scoring aces. Senior Squad The Provo high squad, as announced an-nounced Tuesday by Coach Glenn Simmons, Ls comprised entirely of seniors. It will be as follows; Guards Peterson, Hayward, Jensen, Jen-sen, Larson; center Allen; forwardsHoover, for-wardsHoover, Colton, Daniels and Fielding. Jensen can change off at center if necessary. After two playoff games, the Bulldogs were given a brief respite re-spite following Saturday's win over Spanish Fork. The team will travel to Salt Lake City at 1 o'clock Wednesday and will stay at the Hotel Newhouse. "All the boys are feeling well," said Coach Simmons. "They've been through so many 'crucial' games that they are not too ner-,vous ner-,vous now, but should be in the ''right frame of mind Wednesday night." Kay Reese, athletic manager, will accompany the squad. Get the Provo Habit It Pay Now More Than Ever! 10 ENDS TODAY! SO Continuous From 2 P. M. YOUU UST CHANCE To See This Big Picture! "MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY" CLARK GABLE CHAS. LAUGHTON FKANCHOT TONE STARTS TOMORROW! The First Big Bargain Days Adults! Dcn't Forget U C Every Wed. & Jlj)V Thur. you can see a Thrilling Program at BARGAIN PRICES! A CHINESE PUZZLE r lK CRIAAFI Chan' faces a gang of death -dealing smugglers, to solve a arim liP&r mystery I (SOflRfD uami mm cms auh? TODD & KELLY COMEDY SWISS TRAVELTALK METROTONE NEWS RETURNING SUNDAY! MORE STARS THAN THERE ARE IN THE HEAVENS! "BROADWAY MELODY of 1936" 1 c & r.-v.v.' ' - ' a st. a am 4 I CLINCH TITLES rH Telluride, Leven's To Contest For City League Titles --Nxt Monday. Telluride Motor company's high powered basketball team defeated the Taylor Brothers quint 55 to 41 to take the first half title fax the Recreation league, and Lev- 43 to 40 to win the second half of, the Commercial league Monday Mon-day night at the Third ward gymnasium. gym-nasium. Champions of the two halves will .. fight it out in the Provo high school gymnasium next Wednesday, Wed-nesday, March 25, the champions will play for the city title and a trophy awarded by the Utah Oil Refining Company. The schedule next Monday: 8 p. m. B. Y. U. Faculty vs. Leven's for Commercial title. 9 p. m. Pacific States Pipe vs. Telluride for Recreation title. Telluride's high scoring quartet of Manson, Gourley, Senior and Collins was too much for the Taylor Tay-lor Brothers quint to handle and the motor company team ran up a score of 21-15 at the half then went on in the second chapter to pile up a commanding lead. Don Dixon, Fred Dixon and Reed Old-roycf Old-roycf paced the losers. The Leven's-Provo Cleaning game was a hard-fought affair. Trailing 8-10 at the first period the Leven's club went ahead 20-19 at the half when Jack Eastmond started sinking them, then main-j main-j tained a slight margin in a nip-and-tuck last-half battle. Jack Eastmond led the scoring scor-ing parade with 18 counters, his brother Tom coming in for 14 points. Reese and Perry topped the losing quint. The scores: TELLURIDE MOTOR G. T. F. P. Manson, If 6 0 0 12 Gourley, rf 7 2 2 16 Senior, c 6 5 3 15 Rowland, rg 1 0 0 2 j Collins, lg 5 0 0 10 Peay, If 0 0 0 0 i Stagg, rg 0 0 0 0 I Totals 25 7 5 55 j TAYLOR BROTHERS ' G. T. F. P. ! F. Dixon, If 4 0 0 8 , D. Dixon, rf 5 0 0 10 Stephens c 1 2 1 3 Eggertsen, rg 1 2 0 2 ' Oldroyd, lg 4 5 1 9 Booth, rg 0 4 3 3 Richins, c 2 2 2 6' Totals 17 15 7 41; Score by quarters: ' Telluride 10 21 3255 Taylor 6 15 2841 LEVEN'S i NOW PLAYING tfsneinf ana romancing to' tho tingling tmnaa of 7 V now song 3 satfons. n with RANDOLPH SCOTT HARRIET HILUARD ASTRID ALLWYN lyric and music by IRVING BERLIN Directed by MARK SANMlCR fondro S Bermah Production, founded vpon the plo "Shore leov" by Hubert Osborne. This Week End BOEDER DM1 . .; with iROSS ALEXANDER PATRICIA ELLIS LVLE TALBOT STARTS SUNDAY with ftlCK POWELL ,'JIUBY KEELER JACK OAKIE JOAN BLONDELL HUGH HERBERT .1 A fe .v Toppled Prinio Camera, giant Italian heavyweight, who once held the world championship, quit after three rounds of fighting Monday night when .LeRoy Haynes, negro battler, gave him a fine lacing. NEGRO FIGHTER MPS GARNERA PHILADELPHIA, March 17 (U.P The mountainous form of Primo Camera was rubbed off the heavyweight picture today and the big Italian's hopes for a comeback were gone glimmering. Instead, there appeared on the boxing horizon another "black menace," LeRoy Haynes, born in Indiana, raised in California and adopted by Philadelphia. The end of Da Preem came dismally dis-mally in the third round of a scheduled 10-round bout at the arena last night before approximately approxi-mately 10,000 fans who paid $16,000. Haynes spotted Camera 68 pounds. ADDITIONAL SPORTS PAGE 7 G. T. F. P. T. Eastmond, If. . . 6 4 2 14 J. Eastmond, rf 7 10 Evans, c 0 0 Decker, rg 1 3 M. Olsen, lg 3 3 Miller, c 0 2 Van Wagenen, g 0 0 Losee, g 0 0 18 P' 0 9 43 Totals 17 22, PROVO CLEANING G. T. F. P Smith, rf 1 4 Reese, If 4 4 Madsen, c 3 2 Perry, rg 5 1 C. Olsen, lg 1 4 Bunnell, rg 1 2 Dallin, rf 0 1 3 5 3 11 2 8 0 10 3 3 o Totals 15 18 10 40 Score by quarters: Leven's 8 20 Cleaners 10 19 30-29- -43 -40 ' ''''i'f'S't History echoes along every mile of this scenic highway east for this is the Overland Trail, the brave path of the pioneers of '49. Along the course of their faltering steps your big, safe Union Pacific bus glides easily over a great highway, the short "Mid-America Route east. Passing rugged western scenes and great cities you can now re-live history in perfect ease and comfort. .Let the Union Pacific bus agent tell you about the bargain low fares now in eSect to all the east. UNION BUS DEPOT Interurban Station Phone 310 DENVER $8.0C OMAHA 15.00 CHICAGO 21.50 ru,cc qpddogd mmm iiiiiS s JACK TOPPLES FLOYD HANSEN Petro Knocks Out Keneck After Half a Round; Fight For A. A. U. Places. BY L S. JACOBS . Jack Brentano, Canada, won over vFloyd Hansen, Salt Lake City, in the wrestling match that headlined the bill at the Park Ro-She last night, while Lou Petro, classy Provo boxer, knocked knock-ed out Jimmy Keneck, WPA camp, in one of the fastest bduts of the A. A. U." boxing elimination meet. The matches were fast and gave the onlookers plenty of action and entertainment. The wrestling match was rough and was won by Brentano when the third and deciding fall was given him on a foul. After using armlocks on each other for 18 minutes, Hansen and Brentano went into a clinch, with Hansen coming out on top with a body scissors to win the first fall. The Salt Laker changed his tactics as soon as he entered the ring for the second fall and started pulling I hair, elbowing and roughing it in , i it. i i; i . i. - : genera.. He immediately tat the Klinnnrf nf tha fen; ffionlo hp hart I support of the few friends he had in the audience, and began wrest-ling wrest-ling two men, Brentano and Arcade Ar-cade Pierce, the referee. Between the body slams he received from Pierce for pulling hair, and the armlocks he groaned under from the Canadian, he was glad to give up in twelve minutes when Brentano Bren-tano "applied the dishrag hold. The third fall was rougher than either of the others and ended after Brentano, on his fourth trip out of the ring7was jumped on by Hansen as he hit the hardwood hard-wood floor. He couldn't return by the count of ten so Referee Pierce awarded him the match on a foul. Lou Petro was too strong and fast for Jimmy Keneck in their 135 pound bout. After three hard rights had hit him on the side of the head, Keneck couldn't tell the difference between horizontal and vertical and was counted out before the first round was half over. Elmo Curtis, Provo CCC, decis-ioned decis-ioned Dell Elder, Lincoln, in another an-other fast 135 pound bout. Curtis' left hand was too much for the : hard hitting schoolboy. 0 I In the 145 pound class . Paul 3,Rawlings, Lincoln, drew with Joe 7 .'Blake, Orem. after a fast and wild li'.hmit that lpft hnrh hovs bleedinc and tired. ' -TsiVm T iinH Prnvn C!CC and Bill Moore, Spanish Fork, two 165 i pounders, fought three close ! round. Lund was given the de- i ciaion. j Two heavyweights, C. Goforth, j 174, and J. Saunders, 191. from i i the WPA camp, put on an enter- ; I taining bout that was called a j draw. Woody Howe, 126, proved too j Lake View district from the in-hard in-hard a puncher for Eddie Brad- roads of pheasants will be discus-ford, discus-ford, 126. when he handed Brad- sed at a meeting to be held in the ford three hard body punches j Lake ' View ward chapel, Wednes-carlv Wednes-carlv in the first round to win by day at 7:30. Representatives of a k. o. In the lighter weights Dale A NEW YORK 34.25 BOSTON 36.80 LOS ANGELES 8.00 Mr s s Elk Sportsmen Recommend Two-Mile Drift Fence: i The herd of 55 elk whieh once roamed the southern exposure of Mount Timpandgos has been reduced re-duced during' the last 'year ;to 15 or 20. hitd, report a group of local sportsmen, who $uhday took an annual, horseback ride into the elk winter-deeding ground to ih-vestgate ih-vestgate conditions. Twenty-eight of ' the animals were trapped during the winter and distributed to other areas by the state fish and game department. depart-ment. Fifteen others were removed re-moved by hunters last fall, making mak-ing a total reduction of 43 head. This year, members of the party par-ty discovered only 12 elk on their moring ride, while last year they encountered 42 of the wary animals. Since the elk have disposed dis-posed of their old horns by this time, the . observors were unable to determine if any bulls were included in-cluded in the herd. Others who have been watching the herd are pf the opinion that only one old bull remains. The ride into the elks' stomp ing grounds was sponsored by v'n T eug -. uSTSSh an . . r Brim hall, prominent tion his been an annual feature since the elk were planted on the ! mountain in 1926. Another mem - of the party was Mayor Mark I Anderson, who was largely re-1 sponsible for securing the elk for this area, and who has been instrumental in perpetuating this spring jaunt. Other members of the group ! were; j. j. morgan, sail iaxe City sportsman; LaMar May-cock, May-cock, C. F. Peterson, Al Peay, Verl Peay, Bill Turner and Vic-1 tor Brimhall, all of Provo. All are interested in wild life and hunting. hunt-ing. An hour's ride brought the party par-ty into a sportsman's paradise. Beginning at the foothills, approximately ap-proximately one mile northeast of the town, of Orem, the men directed dir-ected their horses upwards to the great basin at the head of Maple canyon and returned along the ridges east of Dry canyon which bisects the Timpanogos foothills. A distance of about eight miles was covered in the three hour ride. Deer are unusually plentiful on j the slopes of Timpanogos, the sportsmen round. After riding t)nly 40. minutes, the first small herd was encountered. Thirty-six Thirty-six head. of deer were seen during Pheasant Meeting Slated Wednesday i Means of obtaining protection 1 for the farms in the Vineyard and me iiau mm game uepariment Will be present. The farmers claim damages- of $5000 were suffered last season. They want to know if they are going go-ing to get any protection from the state fish and game department depart-ment this year. Traps were placed last winter to catch some of the pheasants, but no report has ever been given as to the number trapped. trap-ped. France has only 391 persons j with annual incomes of $60,000 or more, as compared to 850 persons with such incomes three years ago. Roberts fought Ralph Dickie, Lin- j coin, to a draw and Jack Adams, j a hard-hitting left hander from I Lincoln, drew with Kay Cook, a ; one-hand puncher from Goshen, j Kenneth Carter, 95, drew with Keith. Batley, 104, in the prelim-, inary. Tells otlneirs what he smiokes SACK WAftSOW has used T. A. for lSyers 1 jnever rolld any other Smoke with such fine flaror mad free of any 'bite' the way P. A. is," he says. "For a cool, pleasant smoke, try Prince Albert" Prince Albert is guaranteed to please you too. Bead oar no-risk offer. Try , mild, mellow P. A. in a pipe too SO the ride, most of them from a short distance. Much small game, especially pheasants and rabbits, was also observed. "Many people of Provo and surrounding vicinities do not realize real-ize that a wild life paradise exists ex-ists in such close proximity," declared de-clared Mr. Brimhall, at the conclusion con-clusion of the jaunt. "Local citizens citi-zens go to the Kiabab forest or to Wyoming's Jackson Hole country coun-try to see elk and deer in their natural habitat, when a two hour's walk or one hour horseback ride from Orem would bring them into the middle of deer and elk country." coun-try." The best time to visit this region is the early .spring when the snow line is low, it was explained. ex-plained. Deer and elk winter in the low foothills and foljow the snowline in the spring as it recedes re-cedes up the mountain. The elk are generally found at a higher elevation than the deer. Reduction of the elk herd thru trapping was prompted by complaints com-plaints of orchardists along the foothills that wintering elk were leaving their foothill feeding ground to feast on the leaves and young shoots of their fruit trees. The elk had plenty of feed but preferred the fare provided in the orchards. Local sportsmen supported a proposal advanced by Mr. Anderson Ander-son to protect the farmers and save the errant elk. His proposal was that a drift fence, two miles long, similar to the fences employed em-ployed in the Jackson Hole country coun-try be built. This fence was to be seven feet high, constructed of woven wire and barb wire. But the fence was not built and the policy of limiting the herd by ! trapping was instituted. A corral for trapping the animals ani-mals was constructed about four Perry's Seed Store The Home of Good Seeds-PlantsBulbs We Sell Loose Flower & Vegetable Seeds Plant Your Sweet Peas Early NEW LOCATION 408 W. CENTER Next to Bonnett-Vacher Drug Wni?aimg Matfei?naIlo Everything you need to wire your home SAVE MONEY By Buying At Our Low Prices! IPECK EILECTI&nS 46 North Univ. r SHOWING- TW& F1NB POINTS -of Prh-:AIbertUfeyoiiown 'i: totHeoils"a.hobhy:ith Jaek. ; Warwm.0fgjTitbinzfrfendlj,- -, lie says, .to teir other -makin'sf. amolcrtltP.A-UVrJoipc-so . -. sou w Kami ww V W ii "... ii UUU UiH w : X IBID JJL at at : ! years ago. It is a circular, wood- t en enclosure about seven feet high. When a hungry elk is enticed en-ticed into the corral by an inviting invit-ing stack of hay inside, the gate is closed by an observor in a near- (. by tent and Mr. Elk is soon a j frightened truck passenger en- j route for another range. Last winter was the first winter when snow fell heavily enough and extended ex-tended low enough to permit the trapping of any animals. Members of the party express- ed regret that the hero, had been reduced to such a low level. "That is ideal elk range and there is plenty of feed to support an even larger numbe. than the one-time herd of 55 head," they affirmed-They affirmed-They are working for the inclusion inclus-ion of all the land on the southern exposure in the national forest and the creation of a game preserve pre-serve in this area. "Construction of drift fences and a supervised feeding program would make that area an ideal center for the preservation pres-ervation of wild life," they believe. By R. M. imiin iwim- tPTtt tmiw Pcoa- UutUbcT Dtvtidoa jfaool DtatClr Prod acta Corp.. N.T. C Ave. Phone 418 70 fine roll-your-own cigarettes in rery 2-ounce tin of Prince Albert EXACTLY HOW TO TRY PRINCE ALBERT AT OUR RISK Roll yourself 30 swell cigarettes ciga-rettes from Prince Albert. If you don't find them the ftnett tastiest roll-your-own ci?a rettes yoa eer smoked, return the pocket tin with the rest of the tobacco in it to us at any time withra'a month from this date, and we will refund fall purchase price plus postage. pos-tage. (SlznedR.X Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, Winston-Salem, North CareTina. a.j.1 THE H ATI 0 N AL J O Y U OKE ' '. , y- . r r r |