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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1952)
Grande Drnno Kegister-Guard, Eugem, Or. Fri., Mar. 21, 1952 Page vniversity I N- "L .... T . I r,JannHlhem , La- ifler lead L.. 'VMM ii! Pi OOCOlf LA hfOl fc.01 Lr?ts Leobge sum ice to Ijiout t Morris high 1 Buckwalter-led La- maintained a steady 10- thehost Uni- Pom, bu, the s gave the host Uni- Pmt bulge until just before ,h, fqufntaquick.tnp to Jmuh w en s hul,s tjpjn -S.iinps in tne cntuiiiua"j -7 o-f nine, ia-ie. Bu il the flashy Eastern m"tis Buckwalter swished in" Quint Rut the flashy Eastern Buckwalter swished in a trimmed the Tiders one-hander from outside and in ,rsday night's final 'ml"'. ended 27-16 for the uni ui' -Thursday nights final ney contest. for the secona siraigm tourney - ... .ucu i( hard-runnme Tiopr ,lagued with ineffective the contest wide open in the first only three minutes versity was having trouble eettinir a. after the ODenine a shot against th K,..i,i let alnn " v.""." "e. ...ulkc ail uasicets. The Gloria Dumps lans, 55-43 (Game No. 11) 1 third - quarter point spree tied Astoria into the fifth place tj tournament finals when the tinnen thumped The Dalles L in Friday morning's first tat Astoria, trailing 23-19 at half- rolled in 24 points in the ii quarter while the ineffective cms were scoring only five, at burst gave Ward Paldanius' H43-28 margin and they were fa pressed in the final panel. jick Paviat ana Kon Brown, il three points apiece, pushed wiiintoa 25-23 lead after 1:40 the second half. Dick Haynes iif a Ireethrow for The Dalles nit the distance to one point. lea Hon Smart, the Fishermen's et center, hit twice from the Kite make it 28-24, THE DALLES, whose fast break idy ran out of spark in this ts. held even at 34-28 after 5:25, I two more baskets by Smart, Ik tallies by Jerry Gustafson, V Dave Lum's fielder ran out quarter with Astoria comfort on top 43-28. tiler a brief 3-0 deficit, The lb led all the way in the first il The quarter count favored Indians 14-8 and they were in :t!3-19 at intermission. Dick Iliad's 10 points paced The .8 through the first two quar After that, the Eastern Ore- liins lost the basket range, le Astoria waxed hotter and r decided the issue. put's 15 points was high for I miners, with Favlat and Gus- bn collecting 11 apiece. Hol- !', with 12, and Tom Moore, 1 10, were top point-makers ie Indians. n score: MA (SA) (13) THE DALLES I n ft tl lo li ii pt in W H I SUrness. 1 0 2 4 4 3 111 Haynea.l 3 1 2. S t 1 3 17 Mnnra 4 9 4 in P! ! I 9 Holland. M I 11 v i t L.unaen.s a I .1 0 seconds after the opening Gen Westenskow starred at' downtaii wun a Irel and Morris Buckwalter, lected 33 points in the con- eed a lonowup. awu muic by'Morris and a gifter by ti t un the 8-0 lead. SCHULTZ broke the ice for University with ows at tne iour minute f-1A Tirla mtltoH ,m IB UU1UCII HK on Al Gubrud's outside Dave Caudell's singleton. WestensKow, mmut, 7 """" quick basket Davies gave the strings a 8ave Um-Hi life in the fourtl lit to ena om mt quua ai? -- - uuce punecl with in 14 tallies. 5n-Sfi hut min,,t ;.-r. lour "'ureu. university gar nered only a lone point after that. ...uu oj poims was the ,, "s ""w oi me game. Westenskow, another top-notch LaGrande forward, clicked in 12 Gubrud's 14 set the pace for the cox score: RTTrirur A r i.K.n . .. .. ..miitB nit three bask ets and two freethrows in this rgi.v Westenslow looped 37-16. Buckwalter hit a couple more of outside potshots a few minutes later to give the Eastern Oregonians their biggest lead of B tg.aT 4' 23 points' 45-22-Baskets by Daye Caudill and John thJ IV Se.d th,s t0 45"2S w'hen the third canto came to a finish. '8TT hJj'xf'iiHii M. Buck l wesien..f 5 Davles.c 1 R. Buck. 3 Hill.n o Trotter.f 0 .winburn 0 ICornwell 0 Walsh, B 0 M (37) I'VTvprsitv 1 & S S 5 S v Jnai er i 0 0 ORolph.f 1 o i nwncox.f n 0 0 0 Flamme 0 L imtvS n urn '3? 3 'freethrow gave the Pirates their'field within six points, but Foster, Central Tops Marsh field, 55-45 (Oimi No. ll . .last lead after two minutes of the. a springy - legged competitor. f J third quarter at 27-26 when thejeaged a southpaw overhead loop inree Dig o-. .i.uaj ,, u. i tj. t i . whcelhorses - Bob Altenhofen,!"""" UF t""'"' !'! " "J "I " " m"aB Johnny Foster, and Paul Bartho-I BARTHOI.OMT. a swect-work-: !?'0, r'P n the key for a lay-m. lomv moved into the chamninn- me Euarn. started It oft with ai: " H'"-" ship semifinals in Thursday after- swisher from the right corner, noon's third and final game when land Altenhofcn kept the Catholics the Portlanders broke loose in the rolling with a hook shot and free second half to submerge a battling throw. Tom Crabtree's singleton dui Drone tne game wide open with the Rams comfortably on top 42-30. Altenhofcn and Hillstrom matched two-notntcrs as the De- tuiun. uin vmuiirea .,iiiKii-ivii i . , , ...... . , L Marshfield 55-45. i narrowed the gap to 31-28 when! DOD nJulaer " ys At halftime, the festivities were Bartholomy went back into action, i " h " all even at 22-22. SDike Hillstrom'si Crabtree's fielder moved Marsh-1 Central threatened to make it Sfi RUNNING Les MacMitchcll, former national mile champion hired as a spe cial uodger coach, demonstrates to Brooklyn base runners the art of getting a quick start. Those watching MacMitchell are. left, Andy Pafko, Carl Furillo, Al Walker, and Bill Antonello. 'Splendid Spire' Grinds Out 41 Points Halbrook Whips Bend Bears i Totals 23 8 19 54 ToUlj 13 11 8 37 Quarter scorei: University 17 10 18 9-34 ' 10 1137 Freethrows mined: LaGrande (81 : M Buckwalter 2. Westenskow 2. Hill" ivin burni University .121; Pierce Schulfc Morlarty, Whitelev 2. Caudell 8. 0-"u"z' Shooting averasea: LaGrande 23 lor 4 .359 university 13 for 50 260 Offlclals-Lloyd Lewis and Jue'l Fau. luim no, mi Henri aumo T 4, Dfl- " o -.a to ucoi gdvc i Wade Halbrook and his Lincoln maies everytning they had but it WaSn't enntlPh at HalKrnnl- his "Slinger's Midgets" teammates rolled into the state tourament championship semi-finals with a 68-53 victory in Thursdav nieht's 'opener. ; The big fellow re-set the indi vidual game scoring record in the contest by dunking in 41 points, j He set the old mark of 40 Wednes iday afternoon. But the record wasn't the highlight of the game Halbrook sets 'em by the dozien. oenas territic struggle with the "Spire" for three quarters was what surprised the McArthur Court crowd of 7500 fans. t t a I.. . kuj 2 0 11 P.g.1 0 0 0 0 Berry .e 113 3 T ' J vnyoe.i 0 1 1 0 1 OUrness.s 0 0 10 f H 11 39 Totali 11 7 3 43 Inr scores: "Jna P Dllles ... S 11 24 1255 14 9 5 1543 f?fS , missed: Astoria (121: SJ. Paviat. Smart 3. Lum, GuiUt- . ui.,, ine italics ill : K. i. VraessT" Moor" J' D' averages: rC'Sf.,..- 23 for S3 .365 ank-6-N,1,81'."ndMw.lf1Ro- 5et Acquittal tookmakinn Cnca LOUVER, B. C.-(P)All asons charseri ultv. M,ni s operate hnnirmsirin. .-u Fts here wen afn,,ittA4 "V night by an Assize Court F" 25 men and one woman twUSCtL of conspiring to ktl,n8 huses operating in "i uk ana isi. In man, E. "I, II ihjj I pucner, nas 'Med to the Cubs scouting Portland Teams fContinued rom page one) Johnny Foster, and Paul Bartholo by supplying the second half fire works, pulled away from a 22-all intermission tie to trounce Marsh field. The Catholics boomed to a 44-32 margin at the three-quarter mark, with the "big three" doing most of the damage, and the Pirates never could overcome that deficit. The Central-Cleveland semifin al clash pits the two top teams in the state. The Rams, boasting a 23 game winning streak, have a-26-1 mark. Cleveland has won 23 of 25 games, but the two have never met this year. The Ghosts may have only partial effectiveness of their star Ross who bruised a knuckle on his right hand in the Hillsboro contest. Ross already plays with a cast on his left arm which protects a broken wrist bone. In Thursday's consolation games, Milwaukie won its first tournament start in eight tries 35 32 over Corvallis: Ron Smart's basket, 28 seconds into ."sudden death" overtime, gave Astoria a 48-46 nod over McMinnville after a 44-44 tie at the end of regula tion and a 46-46 deadlock at the close of the first overtime; Salem rallied from a 31-31 third quarter tie to trip Klamath Falls 45-39; and The Dalles rallied in the last half, with center Tom Moore scor ing 18 points, to trip Scappoose 66-52. Scappoose thus kept its record of never having won a state tournament game in eight starts unblemished. Salem and Astoria, perenniel state tournament rivals, earned the right to meet each other in Saturday afternoon's fifth-place final. Astoria went on a hot scor ing spree in the third quarter to oust The Dalles 55-43, while Salem had to rally from a deficit at the end of three quarters to nip Milwaukie 35-32. The session was highlighted by the most spectacular shot of the tournament. Just before the end of the third quarter, Salem's Bob Hazel let fly with a 55-foot archer which swished perfectly througn the twine. The Vik player was about 10 feet past the centerline when he let fly with a shot which was still traveling when the gun sounded. Maroons Nip Corvallis35-32 (Game Ne. It) ' Milwaukie scored its first state tournament victory in four ap pearances and eight starts when the Maroons outlasted Corvallis 35-32 in the final . Thursday con solation contest which opened the afternoon session. It was a 14-year-old freshman forward, Ted Miller, who sparked the Milwaukie triumph after the two clubs had battled through 5-5, 18-18, and, 28-28 ties at the end of each of the first three quarters in a battle of zone de fenses. MILLER'S freethrow opened the fourth quarter and put the Maroons ahead 29-28. A minute Hater, the youngster swished from the right side to make the lead three points. Milwaukie guard Larry Larsen hit from the top of the key, and Miller's tip-in of a missed freethrow gave Wayne Sturdivant's crew a 35-28 bulge after two and one-half minutes. Corvallis made its bid on bas kets by Ron Taylor and Ralph Harding, the latter scoring with 1:35 remaining. But the Maroons took no chances about muffing their chance for that first tourna ment win. The first quarter saw lots of running but little scoring with the low 5-5 count. In the second pe riod, Harding's three long shots helped Corvallis gain an 18-13 lead. But Miller's whirl shot, plus a basket and freethrow by Jerry Zimmerman knotted the halftime score at 18-all. THE THIRD Quarter was touch- and-eo all the way with Harding's llate cast tieing the game 28-28 going into the last quarter. Tne contest was tied seven times with the lead alternating on 10 occa sions. For the Spartans, who were eliminated from the tournament, Harding was tops with 14. Center Zimmerman led the Milwaukie scorers with 12. He was followed by the yearling Miller, wnose sev en points all came at "clutch' moments. Box score: .... w.iruii rta) roRVALUS (321 " jifsnlta tall pi tD Fred'lcks.l 0 2 0 fHardlnn.f 1 0 114 Olson 1 i 0 J 2 Lawrnce.l 2 3 4 I lm'man.c 2 3 12 Gambee.c 5? Roger Wiley's lads, knowing full well they couldn't cope with Halbrook, tried a full court de fense and worked the ball around I the key hole for good shots on 'offense. Those tactics plus some red-hot shooting by the Lava ; Bears gave Halbrook or Lincoln, plenty of anxious moments for three periods. VERN SAMPLES, lay-in and Dick Laurscn's two freethrows got Bend off to a quick 4-0 lead. Jerry Hamilton's corner swisher and Samples' pump from the key upped the margin to 8-2. After Phil Carlin deuced for Lincoln, Hamilton and Tom Hunt cut loose with a pair of buckets for a 12-4 margin. Carlin and Hunt matched two pointers, to make it 14-6 before Halbrook dunked in his first basket of the game after 5:35 of the period. The Swede hit three more points to pull his Card mates up at 16-11 when the quarter closed. At this juncture Halbrook had hit a very cold two field goals out of 10 tries. After Lincoln closed to 16-15 early in the second session, Sam ples layed in two cripples, Laur sen connected from the key, and Dean Benson scored from the end line to build the Bend lead to 24-19. Lincoln, by now was feed ing Halbrook all the way and jwilh two minutes left, the Cardi inals finally got rolling via the I seven-footer of course. I Halbrook hit three consecutive I times from on top of the basket land Syl Hannon scored a free- throw to put Lincoln in front 30- 26. Hunt s long cast moved Bend within two points, 30-28, at intermission. Freethrows missed: Miiwauaie '; Fredericks. Olson. Zimmerman 4. Byars, Da", Miller. Corvallis Hi: Lawrence. Gambee. Polln 4. Shooting averages: ,,,., M Mllwauki !? If" ; H! Corvallis 13 tor 42 .310 r,k?J..ii!Zlil ftuhlan and Lloyd Lewis. IS " 'f..: HoiHiiJ j "eddie Fitzsimmons, his wife, right, antt Nr p! daVSher, Helen, soak up some sun on the roof I.. .rnoenix. Ai. at.. v.t Vnrk Giants Itivin. j Ar,z h0el. where the INew xor umnw Ita of ik jllr'n Spring training. The old pitcher star is I n """ending National League champions' mound Hyari.i . Lanen.tf Davu.f Miller.f Beriio.f 2 0 3 4 Taylor, I 8 i ivlor.at 3 0 14 0 3 Pound. 1 0 i 3 3 8 Black'ne.e 0 112 3 10 7 Jensen. f I 0 I 2 0 0 0 0 EIHnon.f MM HnT I yx3 jp-WvW .Vat THE THIRD quarter developed into a battle of Bend grit vs. Hal brook height, and height won out as expected. Halbrook hit Lin coln's first seven baskets but Hamilton, Hunt, and Laursen kept pace, leaving the score 44-42 with '2:25 to go in the period. Hannon's outside basket and Halbrook s drop-in finished the quarter with Lincoln leading 48-42 and it was obvious that a dead-game Bend try had run out of gas. Big Swede hit four quick buck ets to open this session. This made it 56-44 and that was the game, except for Halbrook's new record as. this spurt brought him to 39. His record-making shot came with 3:05 to play, and shortly thereaft er he was removed. Halbrook's 41 points, 26 of them in the last half, were collected on 20 field goals of 39 attempts plus a lone freethrow. He also had 32 rebounds. Hamilton paced the Bend scoring with 14 as mates Samples and Hunt tallied 10 apiece. Box score: a cbmplete rout to open the last quarter. Altenhofen's driving lay in. Bartholomy's freethrow, and Foster's perfectly timed tip gave the Rams their biggest lead of 49-32. AT THIS rOINT, Marshfield (Game So. In) iVikinps into Satnrrfav aftornnnn V went into a lull court press, and Salem had to come from behind 'fifth-nlace tournament final con- ,ne tactics sharply cut Into the in the last quarter to edge a yearl-; test against traditional rival As-!!'" dc.r".mcns '! Hyistrom ing Milwaukie quint 35-32 in Fri- toria. inasneci in lor a setup Dasket, and dav mornino's final consolation1 Tk. i,-o u, (u Kroush took two perfectly timed contest. The victory moved the seniors on the club. DUt u"i a sur-lDa?ses Ye.r Central's zone for four Vikings Come From Behind To Edqe Milwaukie Team Cleveland Nips Hillsboro, 49-46 prising battle against Salem, and were leading 30-26 when the third quarter closed, after holding a 20-18 halftime bulge. Only Bob Hazel's 55-foot cast-off just at the points. John Young's corner cast gave Marshfield 8 points in a min ute to shave the deficit to 49-40, Hillstrom and Kroush made two other baskets in the Marshfield final whistle of the third poriodIstrinK to P11 the Pratcs "P at enabled the Vikings to pull within;49-44 but nl.v two minutes re- iiiniiiL-u. iiuwcvci was ju four points. Holzman Carlln.f 4 Halbr'k. 20 Hannon.tf 3 Hainrs.B 3 :Roite.l 0 Idlnnpolla 0 jennciiii u Cunn'h..c 1 Satallch.g 0 Benson.f 3 1 fl Ham..f 1 4i Snmpcli 1 8 Hunt. t 3 8 Laursen 0 0 Monica!.: 0 ODahlin.f 1 14 3 10 (Oama No. 13) Hillsboro's well tutored Spartans almost' pulled the upset of the tournament In Thursday after noon's second contest In the championship bracket. Lou Sam- sas boys extended the favored Cleveland team right down to the wire before the Ghosts, who did little galloping, squeaked to a 49-46 decision. With only 1:51 left in the game, Hillsboro's big center Loren Mi chelson battled his way through a maze of players to bat in a rebound. This tied the game for the seventh time at 45-45. When Michelson was also fouled on the play, he hit the freethrow to put Hillsboro in front 46-45. Hillsboro got oft to a quick 4-0 start with Michelson hitting two freethrows and a gield goal. Cleveland broke into the scoring column after 2:15 when Ron Nenow took Jim Mark's pass for a cripple. Three minutes later, Ross' pair of gifters tied the game 7-7. Nenow's bucket and freethrow, Don Bohlman's back-court basket, and Ross' take-off shot put Cleve land into a 15-10 quarter lead. But the Spartans, game as they come, closed it to 30-24 by inter mission with a pair of deuces by both Michelson and Gary Hum berg pacing the comeback. Hills boro kept up the chase in the third session, and three field shots in a row by Compton, Ingram and Gernhart moved the TYV club in to the lead for the lirst time, 37-35 after six minutes had gone by in the second half Freethrows by Ross and Viskov enabled. Cleve land to pull up even at 37-all when the quarter ran out, Ross, the Ghosts "money-in-the-bank" boy, paced all scorers with 18 while Viskov was right behind with 12. Box score: ia ri pi ip if ii pi ip 1 I 11 rrencn.r y z 3 12 uomplon.r a n imrn aon.c MILWAUKIE, in the final period, tried to feed its ace Jerry Zimmerman and the tactics cost heavily as the Vikings tied him up or stole the ball on defense while rolling in nine points on of fense. It was Hazel's work in the last period, too, which was the kev to the winning spurt. Salem, sparked by Paulus' five j lected 11. points, romped to an 11-6 quarter lead, with Gordon Olson account ing for all of Milwauklc's points. With two minutes left in the half, Zimmerman's side shot mov ed Milwaukie into a 17-17 tie. Stan Byars' basket and Bill Fred cricks' gifter put the Maroons on top 20-17 at intermission. Zimmerman's . 19 points was high for the game, while Hazel tallied 14. Box score: (Sl MH.WAHKIK b Ik ri nr It, a a r rrn icki u 1 u i a a uiaon.r 3 fl z-lm'man 3 14 nvari.l lalpg.l 0 0 3 0 Dnvla.f 0 0 3 ;onnr.c 1 o 0 2 Mlller.l .0 0 2 u AcKenile 0 1 Si Totala 11 S 17 33 Tolal 14 7 14 33 Quarter acorea: Salem II 7 I 3S Milwaukie .. . 14 10 333 IVHthrnw. mlaia' DbmI... S. Bradll. Bishop 2, Hazel. Baleai Mil. waukle 14': rrederlcka, Olaon. Zimmer man. Byara. snnntini averaiea: saipm ia ror 82 .2nw milwaukie 12 for 311 ,308 enough time for Altenhofcn to ram in three baskets for the offi cial clinchers. Altenhofcn, who sat out part of the second quarter with three fouls, led the scoring parade with 24, while Bartholomy added 12 and Foster 10. In the rebound de partment, Foster was the spark with IB while Altenhofcn col- HONEY BUNNY Typical of the glamor and beauty that abounds the Roller Derby today Is Barbara Matter, 19, of the Chicago Westerns, all dressed up for Easter. ; s 0 4 Totnli 31 8 B 68 Totali S 18 53 OiiArlir Ci-irf' Lincoln . Bend Bend (3): Laurten. Monica). Baimusscn. Shooting averatei: Lincoln . 31 for 7 .3M Bend - - 13 for 36 .361 Officials Frank O'Neil and John Kolb. Rom. f Vijiknv.f Nrnow.o Mark. Bohlmnn.f Gr'twood.o Stemple.f ! I 1 1 3 III Edward it. K Gernhart. t; HumhurK.i In Bra m.f Pool. HALF. M ISM . u rt vt ti uranu.r PnuluR.f BLihop.o 1 0 1 0 4 6 Nil Box score: O. CATHOLIC (Ml MARSHFIELD MM Is II p( IP , If II pi IP Foster.! 4 3 3 10 Crablree.l III Thnmas.f 1 0 3 2 Hollinf.f 2 0 2 4 Allen'cn.o 11 3 5 34 Kroush.e 5 3 2 13 nnrl'my.g 5 2 4 12 lllllalr'm.l 2 14 Mi-Husk! 3 T 2 7 I.rwls.a- S 0 9 Allen'len.t 6 0 0 a nirk.c 0 0 o J Ayrc.g 0 0 0 0 -Totala iTTlTsT Totali 18 0 31 45 Catiarter aeorea: ' Central Catholle 10 It ' H S MarshllelS 4 IS 10 IS 4 Missed freethrows: Central Catholic) (3i: Thomas. Foster. , Mclluah. Marsh field l!tl: Kroush 3, Hillstrom a. Shoollna averiiaes: uentrnl uathoi Mn.-.ti.l-lt Itciaia .rrpnK u wen ana jonn rvoio. iai attendance owuo. tollc . . 34 (or JO .400 . . 18 lor 85 .217 ., Olflrla ARROW SHIRTS W WllUmalU DUI 4-811 BAB Qmn lUtnn i No. PORTLAND GRAIN MARKET 15-dav shioment. bulk, const drliverv; oats No. 3. 3B lb whila 71.00; barley No.! 2. 45 lb B.W. 80.00. WMfil ma la arrivt market. haaU 1 bulk, delivered coat: jioft white 153: Club Hard Red Winter :ordlnary 3. 52 ".it 10 per cent 2H',; 11 per cent 3. 53 IS j 12 per cent 2.13H, Hard While Baart: ordinary IMVii 10 per cent 2.33'fcl 11 per cent a.SSHi 12 per cent 1.53. Tnday'i car receipt: wheat Mi barley 8i flour 3i corn li oata 1; mill feed 1. NEW and USED M. & K. FURNITURE KPORTlNtl GOODS DKPT. 151t W. 11th at Ultamben rnana 8-9141 Total! Ull 19 Totala 18 10 19 48 Cleveland .1.15 IB T H- Hllliboro 10 14 IS 48 Shoolfna averaiei: Cleveland It lor M .351 Hllliboro 18 lor il .153 Preethrnws mliaed: Cleveland Ml: Rom. Mark. Greatwnod S. Illllaboro lip): French. Mirhelson 2. Gernhart 2. Ed wards 2, Ingram 3. Humbiirtf. Offlciala Wall Roloff and Burt Burr. 'Who...ME change my vWjr?' Brown.l Totala 12 II 10 3J Total! 13 8 15 32 Quarter tcorea: Corvallis '.Mllwauki. 10 Wj tnRTI AND LIVESTOCK MARKET 'toBTiAsD -?APi -,'USDAi- Cattle Friday salable SO: includes load tows; market slow, mostljr nominal: for week, salable 1833: market slow on Increased ll l lb .fed .Veers, 34.25: other Itood and 34l- commercial B7I-I1S3. lb. n.0M:0: commercial 30.00-3J.00: utility 34.00. 29.00: medium and eood feeder steers if u. l-.rf. mn,l , choice fed heifers '891 lbs 33 50: commercial to . low Jood heifer. 29 00-32 00: utility 22 .00 b.t): Hint cutter dairy-typt dowm to 19 00: few commercial cow. 3800-2700. utility 21 00-25.00: canner and cutter 15 50-2000: earlier to 21.00. and .he ls down to 15.00: few commercial bulls 28 50-29.50: one heavy holsteln 30.00: utilltv 23.00-28 00, ... C.lve. Friday none: nominal! for week, salable 155: market active and pVlmY v..'l." cm-erclj! Z.j uui e-.hM and v-Jir 21.00-34.00; cull and utility . Ho Friday ulable Includet l"d no? offered Friday i ","keSllym"kri;:! inal: for welt. "libit 21 M. market; around c-50c !?Vr. JTMn m'h,. Eftfi rnotce No. t and 2 10-235 lb tru'"-;1; 20 00-20 25 lale: mid-week Ml, to 2ft W; I rlv to 20.75: heavier ard Jj rntfr wVlf hts 18 00: chmce W-S30 lb MWt 15 50-17 00. lihtjr we,fhU to 17 .; ioo4 and choice feeder pii 7 5-V18 .JO. heeD Friday none; nominal, for week, talable M5; market uneven: Sinter Umbf under 110 Ibi ateady; larfeiy 28 50-27 00 on food nd ehoic. heavier iambi weak to 23 TO-24 00: food utility 7.8O-11.0O. and food feedera lj.w; tun iviu Kmt Why not? Thousands ... Ilk you . . . considorod Ih idea and diseovtrod a botttr whiskoyl Maybe you like what you're drinking now because you think it's the best at the price. But, can't there always be the possibility that you might do better? 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DOUBLE fjREEN STAMPS ON THESE RADIOS A Good Idea lor Graduation Birthday and Easter Giltsl 44 W. 10th, Euf eno Dial 5-2341 9lh A Main Hprinifleld Dial 8-1262 1 I ii 1