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Show PAGE FOUR PROVO (UTAH)' SUNDAY HERALD, SUNDAY NOVEMBER: -22. 1942 TP Tl TVTV: JJL J V FOUR VETERANS FORM NUCLEUS OF BIG SQUAD Four regulars from last year's teams constitute the nucleus of the Provo high school basketball squad this year, a!nd Coach Glen Simmons should come up with another first class team this year. Also on hand are several reserves of last year and some very premising transf e'rs; Rand Clark, all-state forward, Harry Suker, center, Garth Ford, all - state guard, and Duane Mecham, guard are the boys who played regular last year who are back into Ihe Green and .White mrits. The are all seniors. ClarlC a left-handed sharpshooter, sharpshoot-er, led;V the Provo club in scoring scor-ing jsndst ot last year. Suker, while not spectacular, was steday and dependable in his pivot post. Ford played in all the games last vear. . while. Mecham played until injured in the early part of the season, 'and then came back tn nlnv with the Provo team in the tournament. So Tar these boys have constituted consti-tuted most of the regular team, with Dick Dabling a junior transfer from BY high holding down the ether post. Dabling was one of the shining lights of. the BY high team last year, and is a steady, resourceful youngster ' with a sharp eye for the hoop and who plays a nice floor game. Lanell Jackman, another southpaw south-paw shooter, will probably spell of both Clark and pablin at the forward posts. Among the other boys out for the squad who are making a de termined bid for a spot among the first ten are Bill Huish, senior, and Junior Walker, senior, and several promising junior prospects. Junior. Clark, Russel Taylor, Don Dunkley, Boyd Roberts, Royce Ridge, Sid Headman, Frank Jensen, Jen-sen, and a pair of transfers. Gene Woodbury of Hurricane and Paul Hake of Indiana. Mack Billings, a sophomore has also been seeing lots of action. Simmons ha3 a large squad of sophomores on hand and will probably carry as many of them as possible on the junior varsity squad to give them experience. About forty boys have been re-, porting for practice regularly, and Simmons is not expected to make any cuts until next week. ' Provo is the defending champions cham-pions in the district, and is one of the pre-season favorites to repeat. re-peat. Coach Simmons says that it is much too early to make any predictions about the team, but it will be a fighting team that will go all out for the region crown. Some preseason games have been arranged for the Bulldogsv and Simmons is attempting o ar-' range several more games. The first opponet for the Green and White will be Jordan high school' on the 11th of December. The balance of the boys who are out for the team includes, besides the boys already mentioned the following, mostly sophom ores, Duane Ford, John Brinkerhoff, Paul Thompson, Kenneth Mitchell, Weldon Moffat. Joe Weight, Huck Dyer, Jack Whipple, Jay Allen,, Garth Kump, Lynwood Nay lor, Jim Dudson, Melvin L'alebout. Sonny Son-ny Nelson, and Frank Jensen. Tea is said to be the world's most popular beverage. WANTED ALL KINDS OF HIDES Highest Prices Paid for BONES WOOL HIDES PELTS FURS and dead or useless animals. Pelt prices for dead and useless sheep. Prompt Service UTAH HIDE & TALLOW CO. PHONE S8 S Miles West of Spanish Fork FOR VICTORY - - - REMODEL! DON'T PUT IT OFF! While Materials Are Available. No need to put off whatever remodeling or repairing you have planned. We have a good stock of all essential building and repairing materials. ma-terials. We would appreciate helping you on any remodeling remodel-ing job. NO LIMIT ON REPAIRS Paints, Roofing, Insulation Sash and Screens Buy Your COAL NOW UTAH TIMBER 164 WEST FIFTH NORTH MS m XL 11 II Youthful Willie Pep Pounds Out Win Over Wright v NEW YORK, Nov. 21 U.R Willie , Pep, master of the; left-jab left-jab and "defensive fade-away," wears the New York version of the featherweight crown today by virtue- of his unanimous 15-round decision last night over ancient OhaTUv Wricht in Madison Sauare Garden before the biggest fight crowd or tne year. v. - urn xoung fep, wno was pom wu-linm wu-linm Pannleo 20 vears aero, ear- nered the championship decision oeiore iv.ozi garaen ians including- more than 5.000 from Connecticut. Pep was given a grand ova- tinn uihpn the Hprinlnn was an nounced. Almost everyone in the Garden indicated Dy appiause uibi Pep had given the ancient Los Angeles negro a boxing lesson. He haii muffled Wrifi-ht's eXDlOSiVe punches with a brilliant blocking and adroit maneuvers aiong me ropes that had prevented traps, particularly in the corners. It was a grand little battle in which Wright, whose age haa been estimated variously from 30 to 40 years, flat-footed about the ring, waiting for the chance to lard his explosive right, meanwhile mean-while young Pep circled about him on dancing feet, stabbing with left hands every time ancient Chalky bowed into the beginning of a weave. Those beautifully timed jobs kept Wright off balance most of the night. Pep, who rode a string of 53 straight victories into the white patch of garden light, won the first four rounds, but suffered a gashed cheek in the closing seconds of the fourth. A hard right hit him'on the mouse under his left eye a mouse that had been raiesd in trainings But which bled, nevertheless. Promoter Mike Jacobs announced announc-ed that the crowd of 19,521 and the gross gate of $71,868 established estab-lished new records for indoor featherweight title fights. Wright got 40 per cent of the net, or about $25,000. Pep got 20 per cent, or about $12,500. Feed Loans To Be Made Available The emergency crop and feed loan office, Farm Credit Administration, Admin-istration, with regional headquarters headquar-ters in the Salisbury building, Salt Lake City, is now making loans for the purchase of feed for livestock. The basic characteristic of the loan is that it represents a. form of feredal credit that is made available only to farmers who cannot obtain a loan from other sources including the production credit associations. These loans have been made by the emergency crop loan office on a nationwide basis in each year since 1931. The rate of interest is 4 per cent per annum. The regional office organization includes a field force of field supervisors sup-ervisors who are assigned to a specific territory on a county asis. Daniel D. Bushnell represents repre-sents this office in Utah county and can be reached at the Orem city hall. Outdoor Christmas Lights Eliminated SPANISH FORK Responding Respond-ing to and cooperating with a request re-quest of president Roosevelt to conserve material and man power, the Spanish Fork City council, chamber of commerce and junior chamber of commerce, have decided de-cided , to abstain from extra Christmas lightng of streets and outsides of houses this Christmas, Christ-mas, this decision was reached at a joint meeting of the three organizations or-ganizations held Wednesday night. Christmas lighting will te limited to the insides of homes and Christmas trees for the children in the homes. It is hoped that the spirit of Christmas will not be dimmed by this decision of which President Roosevelt has approved. ap-proved. REPAIR! ... DO IT NOW Get An Estimate Today! Repair That Leaky ROOF NOWl & COAL CO. PHONE 232 E a si .SfAII Prophet OWLS OVJttHAIXW - COUGAR CAGERS DOUBLEHEADER - FOOTBALL RESULTS ROCKY MOUNTAIN Utah State 14, Wyoming & Greeley 14, Colorado College 13 PACIFIC COAST Stanford 26, California 7. UCLA 14, Washington 10. Oregon State 39, Oregon 'Z. Idaho 20. Portland 14. MIDWEST Cincinnati 9, Xavier 0. Ohio State 21, Michigan 7 Wisconsin 20, Minnesota 6 Great Lakes 6, Illinois O Michigan State 7, West Virginia Vir-ginia 0 Tulsa 33, Creighton 19. Notre Dame 27, Northwestern 20. Iiwa Pre-Flig'ht 46, Nebraska 0. Kansas State 7, Iowa State 6. Indiana 20, Purdue 0. EAST Temple 14 Oklahoma 7 Syracuse 12, Rutgers 7 Fordham 20, Missouri 12 Holy Cross 28, Manhattan 0 Lafayette 7, Lehigh 7 Boston College 37, Boston U 0 Drexel 29, Johns Hopkins 6 Penn State 14, Pittsburgh 6 Dartmouth 26, Columbia 13. Yale 7, Harvard 3. Army 40, Princeton 7. Haverford 14, Swarthmore 13. SOUTH Duke 47, North, Carolina State 0 Clemson 12, Forman 7. Auburn 27, Georgia 13. Maryland 32, Washington & Lee 28. Alabama 27, Vanderbilt 7. North Carolina 28, Virginia 13. Arkansas 14, Detroit 7. Georgia Tech 20, Florida 7. Georgetown 21, George Washington Wash-ington 0. Tennessee 26, Kentucky 0. Mississippi State 34, Mississip- SOUTHWEST Rice 26, T. C. U. 0. Texas Tech 0, Hardin Simmons 0. , Baylor 6, S.M.U. 6. Oklahoma A. & M. 30, Drake 12. FIELDS SHOULD FEEL FORTUNATE HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 21 (U.P) At one Hollywood schoolhouse where citizens Lined up to register for "A" gas ration cards yester- APPLES Sunday Special I Come and Get Them Before Gas Rationing WHILE THEY LAST: DELICIOUS Bushel HOMES Bushel $1.00 $1.00 Picked Orchard Run 355 South 3rd East seic woLv&mr r MA KNOCK' J J? m. : BUCKEYES BULL0O& c3s?' TRIPS XS-CZ j) mmim m IbsuUl lrroapecte No Loss PREPARE FOR NEXT SATURDAY Briham Young university bas-ketbailers bas-ketbailers were putting in double time licks this week in an effort to get reday for the forthcoming trip to New York in the early part of December, for which they have only two weeks to prepare. The Cougars will make their first appearance before home fans November 28, when they play their annual doubleheader with Weber college and the B. Y .U. Alums. This usually gives the fans a pretty good line on the prospects of the- Couga?e. j- ' The Alumni team, which is made up of former B. Y. V. stars, usually usual-ly has pretty strong teams, and always gives the Cougars lots of competition. This year the "old men's" team will be made up of Dave Crowton, coach at B. ' Y. high; Gus Black, Spanish Fork coach ; Don Overly,. American Fork coach ; Earl Giles, mentor , at Pleasant Grove; Jay Whitman, North Cache coach; Gee Jackson, who is going to. medical school at Utah university; LaVar Kump, instructor in-structor at Timpanogos junior high, and Stan Neilson and Roland Jensen, who are both working at the steel plant. Weber has always been one of the strongest junior college teams in the intermountain areas, and the Wildcats are supposed to have another strong aggregation this Two teams will be selected ' to nlay these opponents. Millet has not yet made any more cuts in his lineups, but so far he has not yet selected any sort of starting team. Several bovs have been looking good in practice. Bob Orr and Floyd Giles Will Drobably hold down the guard posts on one of the Cougar fives, with Brady Walker and Dale Rex handling the center posts. The .forwards are doubtful. Pete Prus-se, Prus-se, former Provo high school all-stater, all-stater, has been looking good at the forward post. Cy Thompson, rangy Granite ace of two years back, is also looking great at the forward job. Due to the loss of "Deacon" Esplin, this spot will be the hardest to fill on the team. Joe Winters, Davis high flash of last year, and Mahlon Rasmuson have also been teaming at that spot. While Orr and Giles, because of the fact that they are more experienced, ex-perienced, seem to have the inside track on the guard race, several other boys are nressincr them hard. Cecil Kap and Neil Welling, both former Davis Darts, are looking good at the guards. Dick Day, a chunky boy from Nampa, Idaho, is also showing plenty of class. Millet is juggling the twenty-odd twenty-odd fellows he has out in every way so as to give them all a chance to show their stuff. The largest proportion of the squad are freshmen, but they are showing show-ing promise of developing into good ball players with a little polish. Several of the boys have received all-state honors in . high school, and Millet has boys from several district championship teams, as well as four men from the. Utah state champion Davis 'quintet. day, they were treated to an impromptu im-promptu entertainment by W. C. Fields, himself in line for, coupons. cou-pons. While waiting, the comedian mixed highballs on a bar. built In in his car, and observed "I'm glad I don't drink gasoline. That would make rationing dpiost embarrass-'ing- ,. 1 -1 SPORT PARADE BY JACK CUDDY United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Nov. 21 UJ! The! National Amateur Ath1Hr nninn will continue to stage big-time track meets as long as sufficient talent is available, Executive Sec-retary Sec-retary Dan Ferris disclosed today, j Ferris explained, "these meets are important, not as mere spectacles, spec-tacles, but as stimulants to (he youngsters of the nation par-ticlarly par-ticlarly high school boys to participate par-ticipate in competitive athletics, despite the natural distractions of the war. - "Reports to our organization from various service Headquarters show that track and field men are among the best conditioned at the physical examinations and that they develop into excellent servicemen. service-men. In this connection, we should not forget that the youngsters of today may be the fighters of tomorrow." to-morrow." Accordingly, Ferris continued, the A. A.- U. has, arranged its usual schedule of meets ;for the Indoor season, and the annual convention con-vention at Chicago, Dec 11-13, probably wiU map another normal program of outdoor competitions for spring and summer. So much top-flight talent already al-ready has been absorbed by the services, Ferris expects no new track and field records for the remainder of the war. But he emphasized, em-phasized, "Competition will continue con-tinue to be keen in the various events." - Some of the athletes in service are expected to participate in the indoor meets, at least, he said J but many others will not be available. avail-able. Fred Wolcott, the- hurdles king, is a lieutenant at the Georgia naval pre-flight school, but will continue his timber-chopping and already has entered the Sugar bowl meet at New Orleans. Sprinter Eulace Peacock of the Manhattan Beach, N., Y., coast guard station, will be available. Similarly Joe McCluskey, national 10,000 and 15,000 meter champ, who is at the North Carolina pre-flight pre-flight school. And four great runners run-ners at the Iowa pre-flight school Charlie Becthan, Walter Mehl, Tcmmy Deckard and Campbell Kane. . . Other stellar performers, not in, service, include Qre Rice, two and three-mile champ; Gil Dodds, mile king; Cornelius Warmerdam, pole vault ruler; Harold Davis, outdoor sprint champ; Adam Berry Ber-ry and Joseph Williamson, high jump leaders; and such stalwarts as Don Burnham, John Borican, Gene Venzke, etc. EIGHTH ARMY (Continued from Page One) Long supply tains were moving up along the desert and special detachments were working work-ing with all possible speed to transform the newly fallen Libyan Lib-yan ports, including Benghazi, into condition for the forwarding of supplies by ship. It was regarded as virtually certain that Rommel will try to stand at El Aghelia. Rommel was not comforted by the realization that strong Allied forces crossing southern Tunisia would threaten Tripoli, the last I good port in Africa available to Jjhim. There were indications also that another threat might be de veloping- from the Kufra Oasis, from which fighting French troops, with American support, were reported unofficially to be striking for the coast road west of Agheila1. The land fighting in Tunisia had strong aerial support, especially in British bombardment of four Sicilian airdromes froni which the Axis has been flying reinforcements reinforce-ments to Tunis and Bizerte. RAF bombers from Malta were said to have left the airdromes at Catania. Cata-nia. Augusta, Gabini and Cosvmo useless. Mediterranean Mined The Allies appeared to have sealed seven-eights of the Mediterranean Medi-terranean on the basis of a British admiralty anouncement that all waters of the great sea, exclusive of territorial waters, are "now dangerous to shipping and any vessels entering the area without permission of the Allied authorities authori-ties do so at their own risk and peril." The only free areas thus were Spanish territorial waters including in-cluding the Balearic Islands area and waters off Spanish Morocco SLEEP WARM- in Any Kind of Weather . with the : v , G. E. AUTOMATIC BLANKET See and Feel Them PECK ELECTRIC 46 North University Avenue, BUCKEYES COP BIG TEff TITLE WITH 21-7 WIN COLUMBUS, O., Nov. 21 (U.E)- Ohio State capitalized on alertness and daring today to defeat Michigan, Michi-gan, 21 to 7, and win the undisputed undis-puted Big Ten football championship champion-ship before 71,896 fans. The victory gave Ohio State a conference record of five triumphs against oqe setback. Wisconsin had beaten Ohio State 17 to 7. Soggy under-footing hampered work of the fleet backs of both teams but neither the elements nor a stout Michigan line led by the brilliant Al Wistert could stop the take-a-cance bucks as they rolled to the sixth Big Ten championship cham-pionship in Ohio State history and gave 33-yeaf-okM Paul Brown a grid crown in his second season of "big time" coaching. CARBON BEATS PAYSON, 26-7 Carbon's power-packed Dinosaurs Dino-saurs continued their march through the ranks of the Utah prep teams with a smashing 26-7 win over Payson on the snow-covered snow-covered Price gridiron Friday. The Carbpnites scored in the final moments of the first quarter to climax a 70 yard drive, as Bob Brady, hammering fullback, crashed crash-ed through the center of the line for the score. Early in the second period Bob Garnichec, ace quarterback, quarter-back, sparked another march goal-ward, goal-ward, good for 60 sustained yards, and took the ball over himself, for the score. Junior Semken place-kicked place-kicked both points to give the Dinosaurs a lead of 14-0 . at the half. Payson roared back in the third period, and fought their wy from their own 40 to the Carbon three, where a penalty set ithem back to the 18. The Lions were not to be denied, however, and uncorked a fancy pass play, Allen Davis to Max McBeth, who later-aled later-aled to Ted Heath, who slid over for the score and then plunged through the center' or : the extra point. In the final quarter, tne Dinosaurs Dino-saurs uncorked two more scoring drives, with Garnichec and Bradv alternating in packing the ball. Garnichec went over for the third score.. The final score came as a result of the highy touted Carbon passing attack, which, in spite of the biting wind, functioned perfectly. per-fectly. Pesseto shot a long pass to Garnichec for the final score. Both conversions were mlsed. The .Carbon team packed jtist too much power for the Payson-lans. Payson-lans. McBeth, Davis and Heath in the Lion backfield were constant threats, but the superior Carbon line stopped them from any long breakaway runs that have, characterized char-acterized all of the Payson scores this season. Box score: PAYSON CARBON McBeth 1c" Serakin . Staley ., It Taylor Simmons lg .- Garcia Tweede c Peacock Dunstbn rg Drosos Hansen rt. Leonard Barnett (c)....re CIgeto Jewett fb Brady Steele ..rhb Lindstrom" Heath . . . lhb James Davi s qb Garnichec Score by quarters: Payson 0 0 7 0 7 Carbon 7 7 0 1226 Substitutions! Pavson Hend-rickson, Hend-rickson, Amos, Mendenhall, S. Wilson, D: Roper, K. Wilson, Page, Wall, Hillman. Carbon Ridds, Barrows Folsone, Larson, T.- Mig-liaccio, Mig-liaccio, Curia, Marsing, Guy Adams, Piessetto, J. Migliaccio. Officials Wilson, referee; Mc-Arthur, Mc-Arthur, umpire; Stimpson, head linesman. in which Allied vessels are operating operat-ing and Turkish territorial waters. wa-ters. A Stockholm dispatch to the United Press . quoted Swedish newspapers as saying tension in Berlin was mounting' hourly about the battle of Tunisia, since the Germans were extremely curious cur-ious about American fighting morale mor-ale and efficiency. They believed according to the dispatch, that the Tunisian battleground would be pf "historic importance" since it would proviae a test or tne quality of the new American soldier. 1 ' Provo, Utah Utah Staters Whip Cowboys, 14 to 6 LOGAN. Utah, Nov. 21 (V) Despite an 85-yard touchdown run by Earl "Shadow" Ray, the University Uni-versity of Wyoming Cowboys today to-day ended up on the bottom of the 1942 Big v Seven conference standings when they lost to the fighting Aggies of Utah State, 14 to 6, before 2,000 fans here. The victory second of the year for Utah State against three conference con-ference defeats and a tie--put the Logan Aggies in fourth place in the mountain states circuit ahead of Wyoming and Brigham Young University. The 1942 champion will be decided Thursday when Denver and Colorado meet at Denver. Tf Colorado wins, Utah University and Colorado tie. If Denver wins, Utah is again the champiop. Wyoming dominated the first half of today's game; Utah State the second. Ray, certain all-conference back, made his spectacular 85-yard run in the first quarter. Ray cut loose off tackle "and galloped down the field behind scattered interference. The Aggies Ag-gies thought they had him stopped stop-ped twice but Ray kept on going to tally. The attempt at conversion con-version was wide. Blocking Helps-Utah Helps-Utah State got under way in the third quarter when Jack Sei- AUBURN UPSETS GEORGIA, 27-1 3 COLUMBUS, Ga.. Nov. 21 U.E In one of the greatest upsets of this football season, a hard-fighting Auburn eleven today rose to brilliant heights as it upset hitherto hither-to invincible Georgia 27 to 13 and shattered the Bulldogs' hopes for their first perfect season in 44 years. Georgia, depending mostly on the passing arm of all-American Frankie Sinwich, looked like anything any-thing but the team that has gone undefeated and untied this season and been rated byssome the nation's na-tion's top eleven. The Bulldogs just didn't have what it took to stop the bruising line plunges of Monk Gafford, Jim Reynolds and Kirby and it was unable to cope witn AUforn s great pass aerense. Auburn scored midway in the first period to climax and 80-yard drive led by the plunging Gafford. The score nullified a touchdown Georgia had made a few minutes earlier and when Lou Chateau kicked, extra, jpojnt, , Auburn , took a lead it never relinquished. Auburn scored again in the second sec-ond period when Reynolds and Euck Jenkins alternated in lugging lug-ging the ball 70 yards to the double stripe, Gafford going over after taking a lateral from Aubrey Clayton. In the fourth period Auburn added tow more markers to humiliate completely a very much beaten Georgia eleven. Local Aviators Serving Nation Ninety to 95 per cent of the men trained at the Provo' airport have gone directly into the army air work, Merrill Chriatopherson, manager of the Provo airport, told Provo Rotarians Friday. Mr. Christopherson outlined briefly the history of the Provo airport, describing the object of the government's civil pilot training train-ing progarm. He envisioned the time, after the war, when transportation, both of freight and passenger service would be greatly augment-edby augment-edby planes. At the present time. 25 army and navy prospective fliers are being trained at ProVo, he stated. Charles Dillman, superintendent ,of Kopper's company, and Gordon Snow of the endorsement division of the OPA were visitors. T. C. Larsen was awarded the-attendance prize of defense stamps. EXPERT CLEAHinG PRESSING CASH AND CARRY EACH If We Call For and Deliver,' Each Garment Cleaned and Pressed Will Be 75c . 2c IN TRADE FOR OLD HANGERS! . We Need Clothes HkngersJ Wires or Wood Trad5 Them In Un iversity 170 .NORTH UNIVERSITY PHONE 214 . ? Utah's Best Equipped CleardngShoR;' i berling, freshman halfback, started start-ed from his own 21 and went with good blocking to the Wyoming 30 a gain -of 48 .yards. He made first down to the 20 on the next j piay men oeiuerung passea to End-Dick Griffin for the touchdown. touch-down. The first extra Aggie point was added on a fake kick that ended with. Guard Paul Sanders surprising surpris-ing everyone with a pass over, the goalline to Griffin. Ray tried a placekick for Wyoming Wy-oming in the fourth period from the Aggie 25-:-but it was wide and the Agsies took the ball on their r own 20. Six plays later the Aggies scor ed agai. The scoring play started t rrom tne Wyoming 17 after gains totaling 63 yards by Mel Wood, halfback, and Tony Sutich, fullback full-back and on the play Russ Wil liams passed to Dick Williams-1 over tne goal, sanaers converted. TOO LATE FOR I I CLASSIFICATION W i Y FOR - SALK MISCELLANEOUS ROLLER canaries, all colors. 158 North 10 West. Phone 408W. n24 HEIFERS, one, two years old. Wearier pigs. Karl Taylor, Like View. ' n24 SANNEN goat, milking. Tenor banjo, case, cost $50, take $15. -Owen Van, Santaquin. n22 HOUSE trailer, 18 foot Cheap. Stone s Auto Court, Spnngville. n24 . T FARM wagon, corn shelter fnd chickens. 255 West 2 North. n22 lipe. Phone 269R3 Springvillc. I n27 f FOR RENT FURNISHED SLEEPING room, two men or man and wife. 536 East 3rd South. n24 I . ROOM for one or two girls. 416 North University avenue. n24 i CABIN for rent, furnished. 606 East 5th North. n22 LOST CHROMIUM Buick Phone 1618. hub cap. I WANTED 400 FEET of number 4 electric Wilt.. Vctll TOUJ1. li.t SKATES sharpened, factory meth- I oa. uesstoras, 47 xsortn uni- r versity avenue. d22 MISCELLANEOUS cards now,. 50 for $1.00 Nov. 27 f last day for orders. Shirley's Open evenings. , n27 For... - ' CHRISTMAS $130 Complete Compare with any other heart nt aid regardless of price. Please Send Me Information About Otarion. Name ; . . . Address DONALD G. LYMAN, Mgr. 511-514 Mclntyre Bldg. Dial 5-4036 Salt Lake City, Utah IMS - & r, I CLEANING and PRESSING Lien's 3-Piece Suit . . Overcoat or Topcoat-Ladies' Topcoat-Ladies' Plain Dresses ) Gleaners |