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Show -" - - .- - - -i.-v- v-.'." :---.-; j .- .i5"r;s-;.i-' 1 Lcn Mackay and Lamar Brown Lead Provo High To Victory - Lennle 'Mackay and Lemar Brown led Provo - high s chools Valiant Bulldogs to a hair-raising 30-23, overtime victory , over South high of Salt Lake City -Friday night in a Big Nice game I Played on the Provo high- floor. . It was Brown's long heave from reenter court in the- last- IS seconds I t play that tied up the ball same. 17-27 at the end of the regulation "playing time, and Mackay'a set up i in the overtime r that gave the Provo Lenion Five Ccptiires 3rd Gams Iti Friday Contest : " AMERICAN FORK Provo'a American Legion basketball team on iU third straight league i game of the season Friday night ; ; by defeating the American Fork r Legion five, 80-35, on the Amer- , lcan"Torklloor::-TVy--''; "P i,- -Rajr Rosenberg former Branch f Agricultural College, star, led the i t - .Provo auintet to victory with 26 i "points on 10 field goals and six , zreetnrows.-s.' ' r J Pierce and Privett led their team in scoring with 11 and 10 points,? respectively. Each of the tncounted five field goals, vrnue pierce added a xoul pitch jot good measure. The box scdre: PROVO LEGION G. T. F, P. Jtasmuson, f. ...... 5 Clark f. 0 Rosenberg, f. 10 Snow, c. 5 Peterson, g. ........ 4 tPabling, g i. 6 ?erdV4t 3 2 2 6 S 2 4 0 1 11 2 2 6 29 1 11 1 9 S 15 0 Totals ....,, AMERICAN FORK Privett. f. Pierce, f. 33 19 14 80 G. T. F. P .5 2 0 10 Rich ins, c. 2 VSmith, I r Horton, g. . . f Anderson, g. 2 1 0 3 1' 4 2 ' 2 1 11 1 8 1 0 2 Bulldogs their triumph in the ovr ertlme period. -, , -- Tb game waa a thriller all the way with South leading -ll-J at the end of the first -tuarter. 15-14 a the end ef the half. Preve grabbed " a- ne-pelnt.-lead 2si! at the -cad ef the third euarter, , But at the bealnnlng the fourth quarter, the Cubs, led by Brinton and Jackson, who counted nine and 12 points respectively, bounc ed into a live-point lead nerore the. Bulldogs could gather- their forces together for the drive tnat knotted the game at 27-27 at the end of the regulation playing time. . 'i Ralph Olsen. Bulldog forward who hat been having difficulty finding the range this year, and Brown, f a : "Deadeye Dick" from center court, were the big guns in this drive. Brinton and Brown both hit foul pitches at the start of the over time. Then Mackay cut for the basket, took a sharp pass from Brown and drove under for a lay up that meant the ball game. Actually the Bulldogs wen the game en their foul fitches, fitch-es, hitting tlx eut ef 11 tries against twe eut ef five fer the Cuba. Winning games on free throws seems te be getting oulte a habit among the prep school teams ef the state. Jackson's 12 points for the Cubs took top scoring honors for the game, and Mackay were high for the Bulldogs, with nine points apiece. Brown got his three goals and three foul pitches and Mackay got his on four goals and one xom pitch. In other.Big Nine games, played Friday night, West defeated Jor dan, 27-25; East knocked over Og den, 42-28; and Davis won over Carbon, 50-38 The Box Score? South G T F P Brinton. f. .. 4 2 19 Gallagher, f 1 1 Stout, c 0 0 '15 143 35 Wasps and Fovker, Line aln;anaJrXs.k Totals Score by quarters: Provo 21 32 4880 American Fork.. 4' 12 IS 35 sw 'Officials: Peters and Robinson. i " Olympic Official Reveals Committee Jigs For Cash I CHICAGO, Jan. 17 OLE) A , spokesman for the 17. S. Olympic committee said today the American Amer-ican winter sports teams had all the money they need for their stay in Europe, but he admitted of hat the committee had to dig i(Ieep to provide it. i Rumors that winter teams were' stranded at St. Moritz, Switzer- land, spread through sports cir- ' cles in New York and Washington Washing-ton Wednesday, and Sen. Styles Bridges, R., N. H., issued a call 'for public support of the U. S. :, piympic teams. ' f "All teams were provided with found-trip transportation before they ever left this country," the Olympic committee spokesman said. "It is not true that they are - without money for return passage" 9 SIC HtU UiitV 1U11U1 uu u available to pay necessary ex penses of the teams in skiing. figure and speed skating, bob-Sledding bob-Sledding and hockey competitions , ?vhile they are in Europe. "'Utah Skiers For Western Meet I OGDEN, Jan. 17 0J.R) Seven Of the eight skiers who will rep- i resent Utah In tne western inter- I Vjtate ski meet at Sun Valley next President F. L. Montgomery of the Intermountain Ski associ ation. On the men's team are Pat Kearns, Bill Farrell. Dick Moench and Steve Nebeker. Women who i will ski for Utah are Michael Anne neaiy. Amy xoaa ana uonn Law. However, a fourth woman member of the team is still being be-ing sought by Montmorency. Olson, g Jackson, g . . . Ledingham, f Ostler, f Bradshaw, f . . Rich, e 1 8 .0 .1 .0 .0 F 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I MEWS VIEWS ToUlf 12 Prove G Olsen. 1 Oldmyd, f 2 Dunkiey, c 2 Brown, g 3 Kelly, g 0 Terry, t o Mackay, f ...4 SUhli, c 0 Tigers Nip Y High ;v For Second Triumph; Vikings. Edge Lehi -f The Alpine Standings- v - W "2 2 0 0 0 LlPct 0 1.000 q i.ooo .000 .000 .000 2 28 F P Pleasant Grove . , Lincoln BY High American Fork. ...'. . Lehi .............. Friday'i Results: f Pleasant Grove 37; Lehi 29. Lincoln 39, BY High, 37, Delta 37, American, Fork 32 (non4cague)- Next 'Week' Schedule: . Pleasant Grove at BY High, r American Fork at Lehi. . Lincoln, bye. 2 . Pleasant Grove and - Lincoln high school shared the top spot in. the Alpine division of the region three basketball circuit today following Friday night victories vic-tories over Lehi and BY High, respectively. -, , By scoring victories, the Vikings Vik-ings and Tigers both have records of two triumphs and no defeats in league play -to date. Pleasant Grove .defeated the Pioneers,' 37-29, and Lincoln edged out the WUOCatS, 39-37. In a non-ieague encounter. Coach Don Overly's American Fork Cavemen were 'defeated by the Delta Jackrabbits, 37-32 on the Delta floor. , . The Lincoln-BY High encounter, encount-er, played on the Tigers', floor, was a close one all the way, with the Wildcats leading 32-29 at the end of the third quarter. The score was tied 19-19 at halftime, after the Wildcats led 10-7 at the end of the first period. But til Wildcat Mnlint 0 make their third quarter mar-3 mar-3 gin stand un in the face mt a 12 strone Lincoln rallr In tha 0 Ust parted, with Lavell Ed- 2 wards, Ted Allen and Lee 0 Ferguson leading the assault 0 en the hoop that produced victory. mm i Alp in e; Contests Preo B&x Scores . t . .i-.:. aw : v ; ts ALPLNE, LEHI , ' a - Colledge, f Morton, f Kuuedge, c Evans, g ,. Worthen, g ; tioimstead, f AUred, g G-T,F; 1-4 1 1 1 I.3, 1 1 0 Total 9 22 11 29 PLEASANT Jarman, f..., Gourley, f u westover, e Bezzant, , . Hamarr, g vecK,-z e e 4 e G T 3 2 1 10 3 0 4 0 Totals . Score by uaxters: Lehi Pleasant Grove 13 25 11 37 . 7 15 19 29 8 16 27 37 OfficialsPearson and Nielson, BY HIGH Christianson, f Broadhead. f Chrlstensen, c Rawlins, g .'. Ballif, g ..... Mcintosh, f . . Strong, f Hales, f ..... Kirkpatrick, g Totals LINCOLN Edwards, I' ... WlUett, f Allen, c J. Ferguson, g L. Ferguson, g Baker, f Totals 12 11 6 30 Score by quarters: South 10 13 19 2728 Provo 7 14 20 2730 Officials: Rose and Meyerick. Ed McKeever Says He May Negotiate With Chicago Team CHICAGO, Jan. 17 0J.fi) Ed McKeever, University of San Francisco football coach, hinted today that he might negotiate for a head coaching job with the Chicago Chi-cago entry in the All-America Football conference. "I met with a representative of the club," McKeever said, "but I am not interested in any contract talk until the corporation is formed." McKeever said he talked with R. E. Garn, Chicago broker who is leading negotiations to buy the franchise which was recalled by the conference at the end of the season. McKeever, former coach at Notre Dame and Cornell, said that his contract at San Francisco had two more seasons to run and that he expected to start spring prac tice there in March. By L. C DUNN Since the Panamanians ': gave us the thumbs-down f treatment on our request 'for military bases and we caught them entirely off base by pulling our forces : out of the country, there's i much chatter of a new sea-I sea-I 4 level canal through Nicar-' Nicar-' agua. The idea is as log-? log-? . ical as handles on a lov-i lov-i ling up and the Nicar-1 Nicar-1 'aguan Government is as t pleased as a kid in a mud I - puddle. Another -canal 1 ' would be extra insurance. . ; . efpecially since we've out-1 out-1 grown the big ditch in Panama.' Right now we I have several . ships too big to manage the canal. . . . f and many others have to be eased through like an ele-I ele-I phant navigating a turn-s turn-s stile. It's better te be dig ging in now. . . . than digging dig-ging out "later. ; . A lx)s Angeles man was - i BUtn lur uivvivc vcuiuh io " mixed dirt In his wife's face " -j cream. He probably figured,:1 J that was one way to give 1 r her a -dirty look. Now,- If;,. '.' ! your r wheels have Uat ; : crooked look, why not have - " ! ! them' balanced and aligned " B fat STRONG MOTOR COM-'v COM-'v ! J PANY Drive safely, i v ; .'9 V v easily. v. r and r. save- tire 1 ; mileage! Stop in real 5 soon ; for authorized Lincoln -dt : Mercury : service for: your rar. Address! 1150 North Cta .'A . West. , Phone 2306. r a, .r Wasatch Defeats Park City, 34-22 Wasatch county high scored 34-22 triumph over Park City Friday night on the Park City floor. Pouring three goals and seven foul pitches through the hoop, Wright scored 13 points, as the Wasatch five led all the, way through the game. Nichols was high for Park City with eizht noints scored on three goals and two foul tosses. The box score: Actually the game was won at the foul line by Coach Mel Briggs' boys. The Wildcats out-scored the Tigers from the field 14 goals to 12, but the Blue and Gold basketball bas-ketball warriors of Lincoln more thanmade up the difference, by counting 15 out .of 24 free throws against nine out of 17 for the wildcat. Harold Chrlstensen and Lamar Rawlings of the BY High topped the scorers for the evening with 12 points apiece. Both them scored their points on six field goals. Allen led the Tigert with nine followed closely by Edwards with eight and Leo Ferguson with eight apiece. Allen got his on two field goals and five foul pitches, Edwards Ed-wards racked up four field goals and Ferguson two goals and four foul pitches. Big Jack Westover. was the bis gun as the Vikings defeated the pioneers, westover. who clays a lot of halfback in football, scored 15 points on five field goals and uve free throws. After a fairly even first half. which saw Pleasant Grove lead ing 8-7 at the end of the first quarter and 16-15 at half time. Coach Duke Giles' boys poured it on in the final two quarters to pull away in a blaze of glory. They led 27-19 at the end of the third quarter and were ' never pressed after that. Holmstead, a substitute forward, for-ward, led the Pioneer scoring with 11 points en three field goals 'and five fenl tosses, but it was net enough to .compensate .com-pensate for the over scoring punch of the Vikings, who were hitting on all cylinders In the last half. In the non-league game, American Amer-ican Fork blew a 16-6 first quarter quar-ter lead and faded badly in the last three quarters as the Delta five came on with a determined rush to all but sweep the Cave men off the floor in the later stages of the game. Griffin and Chipman led the American Fork scoring with nine points apiece, while four Delta players, Hortin, Fullmer, Johnson, and McAllister all had eight points apiece for Delta. Total! 12 24 15 39 Score by quarters: BY High 10 19 32 37 Lincoln . ; 7 19 29 39 Officials Collins and Buttle. NON-LEAGUE AMERICAN FORK.. G T F P Chipman, f 4 1 1 9 Beck, f 3 2 17 Griffin, c 4 3 1 9 M. Smith 1 2 0 2 Hoaglund, g 1 0 0 2 Miller 1 0 0 2 Fraughton 0 '2 1 1 R. Smith 0 0 0 0 G 0 0 6 6 0 1 0 0 1 T 2 1 3 3 2 4 0 0 1 P 2 1 12 12 2 5 0 0 3 14 17 9 37 G 4 2 2 1 2 1 T 2 5 6 5 6 0 NEBO TINTIC- Hudson, f Toone, tf .,.' Roselund, e Chatwin; g- Peart- g Lee. f . Parker, f . Colovich.'g ToUlsy . SPANISH FORK Nelson, f ....... Rowe, f Mqnoy, c . Brockbank, g Framptpn, g Larson, - c . . . Taylor, f . . . Hamitlon, f . 3 3 4 1- 2 0 0 0 T: 0 0 F P 3 0 10 0 8 Juab Clips Devils, 38-29; Dons Defeat Tintic In Opener The Nebe Standings: Juab ...... ....I,.:... Spanish Fork ........ Springville .......... Pay son .............. Tintle 13 16 4 34 T 9 1 5 4 2 1 0 0 r p 11 1 3 2 10 2 4 1 7 0 4 0 0 0 !0 Totals 17 22 12 46 Score by quarters;, r. Tintle , L . ; V. H 28 84 Spanish Fck f.W. 16 28 46 Officials D, Chrlstensen and s. Chrlstensen SPRINGVILLE Sanford, f Fullmer, f Chrlstensen, c . Hales, g .. Norton, g . Sumsion, f Smith, f .. Clyde, g .. Totals JUAB Wolf, f Boswell, Kay, c Wilkie. g .. Worthington, Wankier, f G 1 2 3 1 2 0 0 0 T 6 5 7 1 2 0 0 0 p 7 6 10 2 4 0 . 0 0 9 21 11 29 Totals DEITA Hortin, f ... Fullmer, f . Johnson, c . McAllister, g Sheriff, g . . Finlinson 14 10 4 32 G 4 4 "4 4 0 0 Dalton 0 Kelly 0 T 0 0 0 0 3 2 1 0 F 0 0 0 0 2 2 1 0 Totals 16 6 5 37 Score by quarters: American Fork 16 19 24 32 Delta 6 15 25 37 Officials Davis and Stapley. Wasatch Pitts, f . Wright, f Bond, e ... Murdock, g Simons, g . Batty, c Lesler, g . G. T. 0 1 3 10 2 4 F. P. 1 1 3 3 0 0 13 7 6 7 0 0 Totals 11 19 12 34 Park City Matbie, f . J. Olsen, f . T. Olsen, c Nichols,- g . Jolley, g .. Cullen, f . . . Caldwell, f G. O 1 1 3 2 1 1 Bowden, f 0 Brennan 0 Totals 9 Score by quarters: WasaJth 6 12 Park City 3 8 PRIVATE FLYING BOOMS SAN DIEGO OI.R) Private flying, which already has increased in-creased 300 per cent since . VJ-Day, VJ-Day, will more than double in San Diego County , during the next five years, according to local lo-cal flying enthusiasts. Some 600 private pilots : are using San Diego County's 21 commercial fields now. U. P. Rifle Teams Defeat A. F. Clubs The Union Pacific No. 1 and No. 2 rifle teams defeated the American Fork No. 1 and No. 2 rifle teams in two matches run off Friday night U. P. No. 1 defeated A. F. No. 1 by a 1443 to 1177 score and U. P. No. 2 triumphed over Amer ican Fork No. 2 by a 1233 to 1163 count. Other matches during the week found Lehi No. 1 defeating Union Pacific No. 2 by a score of 1170 to 1147 and Paysorr defeated Union Pacific, No. 2, 1367 to 994 on Tuesday night: and American Legion Post team No. 1 of Provo won from Pleasant Grove No .1, 1406 to 1367 and American Legion Le-gion Post team No. 2 defeated P. G. No. 2, 1364 to 1264, on Wed nesday night. Roger Price of Lehi took the individual high scoring honors for the week with a remarkable 378, followed by Mervin Redden of the Provo American Legion club posting 370 for second place ana Bob Shane of Pleasant Grove and Alton Groneman of the Union Pacific Pa-cific were tied for third with 368. To keep good thine, the interval betwen ticks of a watch must not vary more than 1 88,000th of a second. ' G 4 2 4 3 1 1 T 2 5 5 3 2 1 F 0 2 1 2 2 1 Totals Score by quarters: Springville Juab 15 18 8 38 4 16 17 29 13 19 28 38 Officials Kump. Christiansen and Lujack Denies He Signed Contract With Bear Eleven SOUTH BEND, Ind., Jan. 17 (0) Both Johnny Lujack, Notre Dame s ail-American quarter back, and George Halas, owner coach of the Chicago . Bears of the National professional football league, denied today that the 22- year-old star passer had signed a contract with the Bears. Halas said that he would "get a great bang out of it, ' u pub lished reports of a three-year, $94,000 contract were true be cause he "knew nothing about it.' Lujack said that he had talked to Halas by telephone, "but we never had a real conference." "We have an appointment for a conference Jan. 21 in Chicago," Lujack added. Lujack said that he definitely would play professional football but had not decided on a team. Draft rights to Lujack are held by the Bears in the National league and by the Ail-American conference Chicago R O ck e t s, which are now being reorganized. Halas said he had heard that the Rockets had offered Lujack "a fabulous salary to play with them instead of us." VETERAN TRAINS DOOMED COLUMBUS, Ga. (U.R) Nar row-gauge ' railroad trains which hauled students to classes at the famed Fort Bennlng Infantry School during two world wars are headed for the last roundhouse, The army announced that the trains, including 10 locomotives and 68 cars, have been turned over as surplus to the War As sets Administration. W. 2 1 1 0 Q LTPct, 0 1000 1.000 .500 .000 .000 XJUDAY HERALD V Stmday. January 18, 1948 ,11 Of em 20-30 Club Arranges Grappling,, RghtXaraforllextSa 3 , OREM The Orem, 20-sO cluhifor the construction of, Ulum-today Ulum-today Was completing clans fdrlnte Welcome- Orem and its big boxing and wrestling show, which will be: held next Saturday night at" the Lincoln high school gym, 'according to George Tucker general chairman of the event. Proceeds fronvthe show will be turned over to a fund to be used Friday'a Results ;. Juab 38, Springville 29 Spanish Fork 46. Tintie 34 Payson. bye ': - Next Week's Schedule: Juab at Spanish Fork Payson at Springville Tintic, bye . V Juab county high school's rangy Wasps today were atop the Nebo division standings, follow ing, their convincing victory over Springville Friday night on' the Nephi floor. In the other league game, Span ish Fork opened its loop season with a" victory over the Tintic Miners on the Tintic floor, com ing from behind in the last half to turn the trick. Payson; drawing a league bye didn't play a game this week. By winning Friday night. Coach Theron Snyder's five boasted two wins and no defeats in league play to date. Although Spanish Fork also is undefeated, ihey have played only one game and. therefore there-fore must be placed a step below the Wasps, even though they have the same percentage. The Wasps divided up their scoring pretty well in rolling te victory. Kay. tal and rugged rug-ged Wasp center, scored nine points to lead his teammates, but Wolf and WlTkle were close behind with eight apiece. Kay got his nine on four field goals and one foul pitch, while Wilkie counted three goals and two foul tosses and Wolf four goals from the field. Chrlstensen, Springville, cen ter, led both teams in the matter of scoring with 10 points on three goals and four free throws. San ford scored seven on one field goal and five free throws. The Wasps grabbed a 13-4 lead in the first period, but Spring ville, led by Chrlstensen, came back strong in the next quarter to narrow the Juab lead to three points. 19-16 at halftime. But Juab was back on the beam in the third quarter, as the Wasps boomed the hoop for nine points while holding the Red Devils to one point. The Wasps led 28-17 at the start of the fourth quarter and were never in serious trouble after that. In the Spanish-Tlntie game, the Miners held an 8-8 first quarter lead and a 21-18 halftime lead, but the Dons unleashed a torrid third quarter attack that produced. 28-28 tie at the end ef the third quarter. Then Nelson, who scored 18 points, and Money, who tossed in 10. led a final quarter drive that Nevada Defeated By Montana State In Great Thriller BOZEMAN, Mont! Jan. 17 (U.B Montana"' State college defeated the University of Nevada 58-57 in a basketball game here last night that required three overtime over-time periods to decide the win ner. At the end of regular play, the county was knotted at 42 all and was again tied at 47-47 and 52-52 at the end of the first two extra sessions. Boyd Detonan- cour's free throw in the last sec onds of the third overtime gave the edge. The Montanamen held a 24-21 advantage at halftime. High point honors went to Mathias of the winning team with 19. Orlich led Nevada university with 19 Sharon-arid Orem Scouts Organize New Rifle Club OREM In the interests of marksmanship and sportsman ship, the Lincoln .22 club has been formed by Boy Scouts .of the Sharon and Orem LDS stakes sponsored by senior scouts of the two stakes and the National Rifle association. Classed as a junior rifle club by the NRA, the new organization organiza-tion has adopted a constitution and by-laws and intends to begin be-gin actual small-caliber rifle practice as soon as possible. Officers of the club are: Delon Selman, president; 'Grant Unger-man, Unger-man, vice president; Sherwin Johnson, executive officer; Lee Davis, secretary; Glen Gray, treasurer, and Lee Jones, publicity publici-ty and photography. Instructors will be Kent Fielding Field-ing and Lorin Millet. They will hold meetings soon with instructors instruc-tors appointed from each ward in the two. stakes. Competition will begin after a preliminary course in the proper and sale method of handling firearms. resulted in victory for Spanish Fork. Toohe was high for Tintic with 10 points followed closely by Hudson with nine. Toone got his points on five field goals and Hudson his on .three goals and threefpulp patches., . .'. safety signs, on U. S. Highway 91 at the entrances to the 'city. Heading Ihe card will be a wrestling match between' Fleyd Hansen who has beeat-piling. beeat-piling. up a great reee-rd la Denver this winter, and Dave . Reynolds, Celnmbua, 0j . heavyweight. " The two have not met since before World War II, so grappling grap-pling fans can expect plenty of action when the--two meet next Saturday night. Sailor Jarvis, provo whirlwind and former navy champ, who has proved tremendously popular in local circles, will headline the boxing end of the program, along with Bob Morris of Salem. An opponent op-ponent for Jarvis is being lined up now, while Morris will fight Don Wright of Brigham Young university. Keith Dalian. Springville, and Kay Bandley. termer Prove high footballer will also held top billing en the boxing end ef the program. Jack Sidwell, Jerry Olsen, Jud Leavitt, Bud Beckstead Bliss Fullmer; and- Don Kavachevich are other fighters who will be featured. The fights will get underway at 8 p.. m. Howie Odell Inks Contract to Coach At Washington U. SEATTLE, Jan. 17 0J.R)How-ard 0J.R)How-ard (Howie) Odell, 37-year-old former Yale university grid coach, today was signed and sealed to direct the football destiny ef the University of Washington during the 1948 season. The signing of Odell as successor succes-sor to Ralph (Pest) Welch was announced yesterday by Harvey Cassill. Washington athletic director, di-rector, who said the new coach had penned a one-year contract. He said one of Odell's first moves would be to gather togeth er as strong a coaching staff as possible, but added that no new assistant coaches had yet been hired. Odell, who brought T-forma-tion play to Yale in 1942, was enthusiastic en-thusiastic about his new post. "I have felt my football future was at Washington since the first time I was approached about the position here," he said. "The opportunity op-portunity to meet the teams on Washington's schedule is a- challenge chal-lenge to any coach. "I feel certain," he said, "we can field a representative Washington Wash-ington team in years to come with the top caliber high school material ma-terial available throughout the northwest." The University of Washington's athletic heads had been combing the entire nation for a new coach Since Dec. 6 when Welch requested request-ed that he not be reconsidered for reemployment at the expiration of his present one-year contract. Odell is the 17th head coach In Washington's football history and the third in the past 18 years.- P. 0 2 4 8 4 2 2 0 0! I 9 4 22 24 13 34 22 Officials: Hess and Longhurst WANTED. ALL KINDS OF HIDES! Highest Prices Paid for BONES WOOL RIDES PELTS FURS and dead and useless animals. Pelt prices for dead and useless use-less sheep-Prompt sheep-Prompt Service UTAH HIDE & TALLOW CO. 3 Miles West ef Spanish Fork Pbene 39 ANNUAL- :i Drapery & Slipcover SALE r ; V2 OFF ON ALL LABOR COSTS Jan. & Feb. Only, at .... . . '- ' 'J. -w .... 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So come to us for all truck parts for International Engineered Parts that fit, that sund up, and that are warranted for your protection. 241 WEST CENTER PHONE 343 AAA- 3!r |