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Don Zehner of Clarkston rolled to the show in his 1947 Chevrolet club coupe, which featured all the options offered in the post-war model year. He and Gracie, his three-year-old Boston Terrier, greeted show fans from the driver's seat. Zehner bought the car from Martin Brown, one of the proprietors of Brown & Holter, the agency which evolved into Chipman & Taylor, the show's host on Saturday.
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Frank Johnson of Clarkston greeted show visitors while seated in the back of his Corvair pickup. The lid was up to display the engine at the back of the nine-foot bed.
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Ed Gilder of Troy, Idaho, displayed his 1928 Ford truck, the largest truck produced by Ford at that time. The Idaho Potatoes license plate on the back of the truck is believed to be the first commercial plate ever produced in the United States. Gilder has owned the truck since 1962.
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Dean Heise and Allen McSweeney of Colfax visit in front of McSweeney's Model T Ford, one of the perennial exhibits at the Chipman & Taylor show.
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Larry Loomis, a member of the Crankers Club, brought this 1930 Ford phaeton to the show. The car features a crank start port at the bottom of the front grille.
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