Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 04, 1932, Page 2, Image 2

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    P'AflE TWO
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON, MONDAY, APRIL 4, 1932.
COLLEGE LIFTS BAN ON
TOBACCO FOR ATHLETES
PHILADELPHIA. April 4. pj The
lad who smokes tobacco can now do
or die for the University of Pennsyl
vania without giving up the weed.
Lonat-cherlahed theories about train
ing tabled are not held by Dr. H. De
41-
rector of health service. Sweet and
Ice cream eaten at the proper time
have his approval. Plenty of plain,
wholesome food, well-balanced the
NEW YORK, April 4. fpy Within
a month, charges of professionalism j Witt Lees, the university's ne
have been levelled at two of Europe's
greatest runners, Paavo Nurml of
Finland and Jules Ladoumergue of
France, and In all probability, neither
will be ellRlble to compete In the
Olyrnplc In Los AnReles this summar.
Ladoumcrguc's name was stricken
from the rolls of the French Amateur
Athletic Federation on March 4 and
yesterday, at Brlln, the Internation
al Amawur Athletic Federation sus
pended Nurml from all international
competition.
kind of diet a ditch-digger ahould
eat is what Dr. Lees belle vea In
feeding athletes.
He does not encourage smoking nor
does he frown too seriously on It.
"Our experimental evidence does
not indicate," the director said, "that
athletea who were in the habit of
smoking and stopped suddenly to par
ticipate In sports made their beat
showing. It Is better to allow them
to continue or to quit gradually."
fel OB
,p; KEELER
Denny bhute, who uaed to be ; golf than usual this winter, brought
The action against Nurml wa taken I Denamoro ghutc m the days whcn,flve consecutive medal rounds to-
ge(,ii(;r in u sj'urb which iciv intu,
pending the reaulfr of an lnve.stig;
tlon Into the famed Ftnn's amateur
his name waa prefixed by "Mr." In
j after the St. Petersburg affair. Just
status now being undertaken by the the open tournament, got Into the;under 73 for 17 rounds and ahead
Finnish Athletic association at the
behest of the I. A. A, F.
Details of the charges against
Nurml never have been divulged. It
was said, however, that the evidence
against the great distance runner was
ao strong that the suspension was
Inevitable.
Before they ran Into official In
vestigation, both Nurml and Ladou
mergue were regarded as almost cer
tain point winners at Los Angeles.
BOASTS OF
NINE GAMES IN DAY
FORT WOKTH. Tex. (AP) Coach
Francis Schmidt of Texaa Christian
university la ranked aa the wizard
of Southwest conference basketball,
but winning repeated titles la really
nothing compared to Schmidt's work
while coaching In 1014 at Arkansas
Cltv, Kaa.
He coached high school basketball
and his teams won nine victories In
a single day. It happened this way:
He took his second string boys'
teams and two girls' teams to Wichita
to participate In the Arkansas Valley
league round-robin tournnment.
His boya'. team won three games
and his girls' team two apiece to win
the championship In their divisions.
Schmidt and his basketcers returned
to Arkansas City that afternoon to
see his eighth grade team trim Win
field, and then he directed his first
string to victory ovor a strong Wichi
ta team that night.
-4
I
BOSBBURO, Ore., April 4.
The first Chinook salmon to be
ought with hook end line In the
Umpqua river this season vu taken
Sunday below the Pacific highway
bridge at Winchester, by Raymond
Pearson.
The salmon weighed 37 pounds and
was taken on light steelhead tackle.
A heavy run of Chlnooks has been
In the lower river tor several days
and the run now la reported on the
way upstream. Fishermen are antlcl-!
patlng great sport In the next few
weeks.
1
winter tournament spin bit late. of 8r Walter Hngen's 27-round aver.
but In the last few weeks ne has ; ge 0f 73 1-9 strokes. Sir Walter
been making up for lost time. has not been winning tournaments,
With hnlf as many medal rounds hut he nas been playing consistently
In the book as Snrnzen and a third j better golf, or at least better-scor-as
many as Harry Cooper, Denny at ( lng goif than ever before In the
the last avnllable reports, was lend- winter season.
lng the list In medal averages his j to cards of 69 and 67 In the Oaa
flRiire was Just under an average parllla open match-play tournament,
of 72: to be exact. 71 12-13, for 13 j Willie added three more scores in
rounds. ;the sum of 209 In winning the 64-
Horton Smith, with an average hole medal competition at St. Pete,
based on the two rounds played be- immediately following. This Is an
fore hla accident, was lending with average of exactly 69 strokes a
71!',, but. as In baseball batting round, and naturally Willie's aver
averages. the actual lender really : nge enmc down In the totals and
has to show sufficient reliability up In the list of scorers,
over a properly long route. j wiffy lias Ilcst Round.
Shute, runner-up In the national j wiffy Cox. who has played 31
professional championship last year, rounds with an average of 73 7-10
Is far ahead of Tom Crcavy, his 1 strokes, has turned In the lowest
conqueror. Tom had played In about ; single round to this writing; a 66
hslf as many medal rounds as Den- j t Palma Cela In the qualifying
ny. and hla average was exactly 76 i round of the Gasparllla affair, for
strokes, his best round of 73. being . a course record,
more than a stroke worse than Den- . stiute. Cooper, Macfarlane, Clar
ny'a average. . enc Clark, who replaced Shute on
Burke Spuria. account of the Utters Injured foot
Billies Burke, the national open j m the International fourball matches
champion, played well In the Florida nt Miami; Ray Mangrum and Dick
West Coast open, and with a score Mctz all have done at least one
of 288. or an avernge of 72. he ; 07 npleca.
worked his avornge up from about j The newest new bnll seems to suit
20th to 10th place, and brought his everybody. At least I have not heard
grand average for 18 rounds down one howl about It, And If a ball
close to 72. I does not suit a golfer he usually
Willie Macfarlane, playing more howls a bit.
t MjlNOIT LOTHARIO
rrfcmn is betrayed by
DECEIVING THE ENEMY
liy Turn O'Nell.
A little slam in clubs with 100
honors when he could have been set
Is among the tournament accomplish
ments of Walter Malowan. one of the
stars of the Cavendish club of New
York.
A deceitful discard caused the en
emy to lead hearts when by a spade
lead the declarer's re-entry to dum
my and with It hope of success with
the contract would have vanished.
The hand:
FORTUNE
SILL AT DEATH
NEW YOnK, April 4 (AP) Ocor-ie
It. (Tex) Rlckard, through whose
hands passed fortunes, left to his
heirs but a fraction of th money hl
genius aa a sports promoter had made
during his lifetime.
An accounting, which Surrogate
O'Brien has approved, disclosed that
htr estate now Is valued at less then
380 000. There now remains $70,033
to be distributed. Hlrkard's wtda'v
snd their child, togrther with other
heirs, have received 133.063.
NORTH
A 7 3
K G 10 t 1
K 4
:H5: I
,7 5 4 J 9 (.
SOUTH 7
tn
A J S
outfit : ? . ,
. a a j to t s
(Continued rom Page One)
TAKES DRIVE GERMANS
TO TOP WATER WAGON
The hand was a laydown for three
no-trump, but Malowan's sxiccess with
the club contract gave his aide high
murk for the board.
West led a club as the least harm
ful of unsatisfactory leads. Soth won
and led his diamond. West ducking
for fear of setting up the diamonds
In dummy.
North won with the queen and re
turned a small dtsmond, which South
trumped. South led up to the king
of clubs In dummy and North thpn
let. the king of diamonds upon which
South discarded a small heart.
Malowan's only chance waa to fool
the defense and he did so with the
discard. West thought South s was
trying to get rid of hearts. After
West took the king of diamonds with
his ace he led a small heart, giving
Malowan the rest of the tricks two
hearts, three clubs, one spade and
two diamonds, upon which two spades
in the South hand were discarded.
A spade lead would have removed
Malowan's only entry to dummy. He
could not have entered dummy to
play two good diamonds. He would
have lost two spades and made only
four instead of six tricks over book.
brrmk. nermsny. fAPi itish i riawancampusueen
taxes on beer, whiskey aud sparkling i
wines are driving Germany steadily j
toward the water wsqon. j
Showing a drop in three years of j
roughly SO per rent, last year' fig- j
ures indicate 0,000,000 bottles of ;
champagne were consumed in Oer- i
many, or a bit lea tian one glass i
per capita. The 1028 figures were j
10. a oo. ooo bottles.
The- cheaper wines, retailing at j
from 30 cents to 75 oenta a bottle,
also show a decrease In consumption,
as do whiskey and beir. Economists
emphnsl the losses In revenue pro
ducing taxes.
Allison Moves Up
In Tennis Ratings
HOUSTON, Psx., April V WiU
mer Allison of Austin. Tex., won the
singles championship of the second
annual Houston Invitation CrnnU
tournament, thereby moving measur
ably nearer to membership In the I
United S'.att Davis Cup team. j
The doubles championship went in'
Ellsworth Vines of Loa Angeles, na-:
tlonal tingles champion, and George-'
Lott of Chicago. ' j
V
i LaO
golf clubs. To the management he
was "a wealthy broker with connec
tions In the east."
The robberies which the officials
said liOftus confessed were;
Citizens' State Bank of Dclavan,
Wis., (1000.
Plalnfleld, 111.. State Bank $10,
009.25. First National Bank of Mere n go,
111.. 913.000.
Bank of Dwlght, 111.. HfllMI.
State Bank of Algonquin, III., 27.-
068.97.
1 People's Loan Bank of Roche lie,
111., (15&9.
Unnamed bank In Cincinnati,
$4000.
Branch of the Bank of Italy In
Los Angeles. Calif., $16,000.
Unnamed bank in Los Angeles,
$3000.
A branch bank in Los Angeles.
$0000.
Four California banks whose names
he said he could not remember, but
where the loot ranged from $2000
to $10,000.
Witnesses to the holdups In Plain
field, Marengo, Algonquin, Rochelle
and Dc In veil Identified him aa the
robber after viewing him in his cell
last night, the police said. Others
were asked to come here to attempt
further Identification.
Loftus talked freely of his affairs
with women. Two yeara ago he
married a Catherine Maher, In Tuc
son. Arlrona. he said, under the
name of Richard Holllster, an alias
he used along with those of David
Loftus, George Gallagher and Don
ald Foreman.
In the summer of 1930, he said,
he met Miss Evelyn Neath of Chi
cago while posing as Holllster at
Paw Paw, Mich., and married her at
Crystal Lake, Ind. There were others,
too, he declared. "I tired of them
enally and moved on to others."
From Prescott he was sentenced
to the Leavenworth penitentiary for
Mann net violation. He said hie
career as a bsnk robber began in
1920.
loftus chuckled as he told of
robbing the Delavan bank, although
he admitted hla was not the "last
i laugh."
! "An alarm sounded aa I waa rob
bing the hank," he said. "But it
seems there recently had been a
false alarm when wires of the system
got crossed So the police did not
come, but sent a small boy in
stead. "As I was leaving, the boy asked
me If there hsd been a robbery. 1
told him no and laughed all the
way back to Chlcsgo. But I didn't
laugh the next day when I found
In the papers I had overlooked
13.000."
Broken window afisard by Trow
bridge Cabinet Works ;
OSEHAM OreV Twoodwork
1r. : Slip p moved t" J tain avenue
budding owua by Uvurj lilt-iicr t
Dorothy Benton, University ol
Hawaii junior, has been elected
LOCAL
DEFEAT
E
The Med ford Rifle club defeated
the Yreka team yesterday in a return
match, one of the closest contests of
the season, the final score being 3430
to. 3429, The shoot was held In the
northern California town and lunch'
eon was served the two teams during
the noon hour, Paul Dodge of the
Yreka team was high point man with
a score of 367. C. R. Pomeroy of the
Medford club was second high with
385. .
Other scores were as follows:
Medford.
E. H. Pomeroy..w...H..w,...m..w.HW 347
Geo. Barnum - -.... 329
M. Gleason HM..H.,..H..HWW. 344
S. J Brlstow 352
C. A. Richmond .... 357
C. R. Pomeroy 365
Fred Sander ....... . 327
W. Painter 317
Ed Lull 362
Aubrey Sanders 330
Yreka.
Jno. SUva, .......,...... 344
W. Hastings ... 358
C. A. They.. 336
O. Deter 357
Geo. Jacobs ,. 327
F. Thomas . 298
Paul Dodge 367
F. Nelson ......... 354
E. Lyons 344
Clyburn 344
ABDUCTION RUINS
PLANS TO SHIELD
By W. F. Brooks
NEW YORK (AP) The carefully
laid plans of Col. Charles A. Lind
bergh, which usually work to smooth
conclusions, failed him when It came
to his Infant son.
Early last spring I went to Colonel
Lindbergh's small office In the law
nuite of Henry L. Breckenrldge at 25
Broadway. I wanted to consult the
flier concerning his plane for the
celebration of his son's first birth
day. I thought that perhaps the colonel
would not know exactly what he had
In mind for the child, but he was
quite definite.
Charles A. Lindbergh, jr., was to
be shielded completely from publicity.
There were to be no photographs of
him on his birthday, the flier de
clared. He said both he and Mrs.
Lindbergh had discussed the matter
at length and they both felt the child
should have every chance to stay out
of the public eye.
The colonel talked quietly, smiling
as he made his point.
He explained that the pressure he
and his wife were under as the result
of their being world wide news figures
was of their own making and that
they would do everything they could
to keep the baby from any public at
tentlon.
On the birthday the Lindbergh
plan worked amazingly well. There
were only brief details of the celebra
tion of the famous child's first an
niversary. There were no photographs.
So it continued. The only pictures
obtained by the alert metropolitan
cameramen were through the use of
long :ange lenses, while the child's
nurse rolled him in his carriage.
Then came the kidnaping. The very
boldness of the act probably was tho
only chief factor which carried it to
success and enabled the kidnapers to
get the child from the house.
The servants and nurse at the
Lindbergh home never discussed the
child with others, at least where their
words would find a way Into print.
Except for a few Intimates of the
Lindbergh and Morrow families
Mrs. Lindbergh was the daughter of
the late Dwlght W. Morrow and Mrs.
Morrow the public knew little of
the child. He was reported to great
ly resemble his father and to have
been just learning to talk and totter
around when his name became the
center of a search which probably
had no parallel In modern police history.
WOMAN GOLFER SETS
MARK FOR DAY'S PLAY
BUENOS AIRES. (API An Amer
ican woman, Mrs. F. C. Vates, has
set a marathon golf record Jor Ar
gentina. She plaj-eo 111 hole In
a day over the llnka of th. Club
Progreaso, third longest course In the
country.
Mrs. Yatca Is natlva of OmaAia.
Neb., but has lived since 1911 In
Buenca Aires. She learned all her
golf here.
Medford Pear Sales, New York Auction
From New York Daily Fruit Reporter, furnished to The Mail Tribune by
the Fruitgrowers' League
O. S. Steel
Corp't Trust She...
, 39!',
. 2.00
Five cars Medford Anjous, 3 cars Winter
sale. Nells generally lower, mostly due to
Anjous Bxs.
Glen Rosa, Eltra .M... 398
Olen Ivy, Fancy 134
Glen Rosa, Extra 86
Olen Ivy, Fancy 87
SOS Transport Ertra 370
SOS Transport, Extra 350
Bear Creek, Extra 224
Polly, Extra 312
Top o' the Day, Fancy ................ 208
Winter Nells
Olen Rosa, Extra ............ . 248
Olen Ivy. Fancy 141
Olen Rosa Jumbles, Extra ...... 125
Olen Ivy Jumbles, Fancy 30
Broadway, Extra 134
Silver Crest, Fancy H 81
Oold Crest, Extra -..-..... 20
Fifth Avenue, Fancy . 284
SOS Transport. Extra . 719
1740 bxs. Extra Fancy Anjous. av. $3.74;
1121 bxs. Extra Fancy Winter Nells, av
Nells sold.
condition.
70s ' 80s
289 285
315 345
325
On best Anjous market strong and higher than
Weather, raining.
280
255
30S
395
300 315 345
300 345
300
350
255 265
290
410 430
405 435
415 425
370 400
360 360
135s 150s 165s 1B08 1 05 210s
310 315 315
285 285 280
290 290 290 265 258 S30
245 245 235 235 215
450 455 465 425 425 426
445 460
440 470 475 455 415 415
4:15 465 440
375 410 415
205 305 205 200 185 175
180 190 190 IBS 170 165
225 325 230 325 315 205
210 210 310 210 195 185
225 225 210 210
220 225 220 225 205 105
225 230 330 225 220 300
last
Avg.
290
2tH
340
208
408
406
436
390
368
189
173
130
119
317
187
318
305
323
399 bxs. lancy, av. 3.11.
2.15; 606 bxs. fancy, av., $1.93.
isiMarkety
Livestock.
PORTLAND, Ore.. April 4. P)
CATTLE 1000, calves 75; slow, steady,
steers, 600-900 lbs. good, 6.25-7.00
medium. 6.00-6.25; common, 3.75-5.00;
900-1000 lbs. good, 6.25-7.00; medium,
5.00-6.25; common 3.75-5.00; 1100-1300
lbs. good, 6.75-6.50; medium, 4.00
5.75; heifers, 650-850 lbs. good. 6.75
6.50; medium, 4.50-5.75; common,
3.25-4.50. Cows, good, 4.75-555; com
mon and medium, 3.25-4.75; low cut
ter and cutter, 1.50-3.B5. Bulls, year
lings excluded, good and choice (beef)
3.25-3.75; cutter common and me
dium, 2.00-3.25. Vealers. milk fed,
good and choice. 6 00-6.50; medium.
4.50-6.00; cull and common. 2.50
4.50. Calves, 250-500 lbs. good and
choice, 4.50-6.00; common and me
dium. 200-4.50.
HOGS 2800, Including 1132 through:
steady. Light lights. 140-160 lbs
good and choice. 4.25-5.25; light
weights. 160-180 lba. good and choice,
5.00-5.25; 180-200 lba. good and choice
6.00-5.25; medium weight, 200-220
lbs. good and choice, 4.25-5.25; 220
250 lbs. good and choice, 4.00-5.00;
heavyweights, 250-290 lbs. good and
choice. 4.00-4.85; 200-350 lbs. good
and choice, 3.60-4.50; packing sows,
137-500 lbs. medium and good. 3.00
4.00; feeder-stockers, 70-130 lbs. good
and choice, 4.00-4.50.
SHEEP AND LAMBS 1700; fairly
steady. Lambs, 90 lbs. dewn, good
and choice, 6.35-7.00, medium, 5.25
6.25. Spring lambs, good and choice.
7.00-8.00; medium. 6.00 - 7.00: all
weights, common, 4.00-6.25. Yearling
wethera, 90-110 lbs. medium to choice,
4.00-5.00. Ewes, 120 lbs. medium to
choice, 3.00-3.50; 120-150 lbs. me
dium to choice. 2.35-3.35; all weights,
cull to common, 1.00-3.25.
Oregon $7.00-7.50 cental: boilers
$5.75-6.00.
POTATOES Local 90C-1.15: Paris
dale $1.25: Deschutes $1.25-1.35; east
ern Washington $1.00-1.25.
SEED POTATCZS (certified) Ear
liest of all 1-lVJc; fculy Rose 1-lVjC
lb.
WOOL 1931 crop nominal; Wil
lamette valley 14-'5'.aC; eastern Ore
pop. ll-15c oour.il
HAY Buying price from producer:
Alfalfa $14.00-15.50: clover $12.00:
Willamette valley timothy 415.00:
eastern Oregon timothy $19.00; oat
and vetch $13.00.
Siin Francisco Bntterfat.
SAN FRANCISCO. April 4. iTPj
Butterfat f.o.b. San Francisco, 20c.
Porthnd Wheat
PORTLAND. Ore., April 4. (AP)
Wheat:
Open High Low Close
.55 .5714 .55 i .57!,
.8614 .67i .56V, .57
56 V, .56 i .57
May ....
July
Sept. ".
Cash wheat:
Big Bend bluestem
Soft white
Western white
Hard winter
.86 "4
.57
.57 .
.55
.55
.65
Wall St. Report
Today 54.5 26.J
Prev. day .... 54.8 26.0
Week ago 57.8 28.8
Year ago ....127.7 92.4
STOCK SALE AVERAGES
(Copyright, 1932. Standard Statistics
Company.)
April 4:
50 20 20 90
Ind 'Is RR's U;'s Total
88.1 56.1
88.9 56.4
98.5 60.1
185.2 132.4
NEW YORK, April 4. ;P) After
slipping Into a new lo trough, the
stock market found new strength to
day, and climbed most of the way
out after general losses of 1 to 4
points In popular Issues, the list re
gained about 1 to 3 and several Is
sues closed with moderate advances.
The close was irregular. Sales ap
proximated 1.500.000 shares.
Today's closing prices for 15 select
ed stocks follow:
American San 5t"4
American T. & T 111
Anaconda
Curtlss-Wrlght 1
General Motors 1
Int T Jb T. 6 ,i
Montgomery Ward - 7V$
Paramount Pub
Radio
ITALIANS PROBE
VILLA ST. STERANO, Italy, Apr(lJ
4. (P Engineers drilled the sur
face of the eartti In many placet
today In an effort to determine
whether the remainder of this llttl,
city would sink Into the labyrinth
of old tunnels dug by the Romans
2000 yeara ago.
Already a dozen houses art a heap
of ruins at the mottom of a pit 40 or
50 feet below street level. It waa
feared that numerous other dwellings
In the area of the collapse would lol.
low them.
The great grotto Into which the
houses fell has not been explores
but from the surface observers can
see that It extends far beyond the
limits of the hole, 70 feet in
diameter. Many homes are located
on the thin crust.
Southern Pac. -
S. O. of Cal
S O. of N. J
Trans. Am
United Aircraft
6'
6
17
24'J
2774
3!4
CAPITAL'S NIGHT LIFE
COPENHAGEN (AP) Emma
Goldman, ex-American communist, la
not so wedded to tho proletariat
cause that she can not find time tor
an occasional fling at night life.
She has been seen at fashionable
restaurants here with bourgeois
friends, once sitting next to a table
occupied by the royal princess.
Another evening she ended her day
wltft a round of champagne and
cocktails at an exclusive night club.
Common Table Salt
Often Helps Stomach
Drink plenty of water with pinch
of salt. If bloated with gas add a
spoon of Adlerlka. This washes out
BOTH stomach and bowels and rids
you of all gas. Heath's Drug Store.
Northern spring ......
Western red .......
Oata: No. 2 white $23.50 I
Today's car receipts: Wheat 27;
barley 1; flour 13; corn 4; hay 7.
Portland Produce
PORTLAND, April 4. (AP) BUT
TER Prints 93 score or better 22-24;
at n net ft rds 21-23c carton.
BUTTERFAT Direct to shippers;
Station 17c: Portland delivery prices
18c lb.
EOOS Pacific- Poultry Producers'
selling prices: Fresh extras 14c; stan
dard 13c; mediums 13c,
LIVE POULTRY Net buying price:
Heavy hens colored 4i lbs. up 15
16c: do mediums 12c: light 10c; broil
ers 12c lb., colored roasters over 2 lbs
20-22c; springs white 15-18c; old
roosters 8c; ducks. - Pektn 15c; geese
13c: capons 18 -20c.
COUNTRY M EATS Selling price
to retailers: Country killed hos best
butchers under 100 lbs. 6' -7c; vealers
60 to 130 lbs. G-OV&c; spring lambs
18c; lambs yearlings 13-14c; heavy
ewes fie; canner cows 3-4c; bulls 6
8'jC. ONIONS-Selllns price to retailers:
A BARGAIN!
LATE MODEL
Sport Roadster
With. wire wheels, A-l
mechanical shape amart
Job and real bargain. Care
fully handled by one owner
Addresi CAR OWNER
Care Mail Tribun
Navy Sub-Chaser
Hit By Freighter
SAN PEDRO. Calif, April 4 (AP)
-.In colllMon wlui the passenger-
i carrying EnRltsh freighter, Javante
' Prtnce last night on the high seas
off Point Vincents, 10 milm north
west of hete, the navy stib-ehaser
No. 84 was being towed to this port
i today by the coast guard cutler Ta-
' mora.
I 4
8.M.F.M 4 state highway project
campus queen ot the university. Sht TOvrln all eectlona of atata and
will present medals to victorious
athletes of the Institution.
roating about a.51,000. nheduled
for Irttim uettteen April 7 and June
.
See Us For
BLACK LEAF
A Complete Stock Of Sizes
Monarch Seed & Feed Co.
323 , Main
Phone 260
USE AS
YOU
PAY
Your credit Is good here at
Weeks Orr Not only are
you offered the finest lot of
furniture In southern Ore
gon at the LOWEST PRICES,
but you can enjoy your fur
niture as you pay!
Bedroom
Now! A Special
April Sale
Of
Furniture
3-piece Walnut Suite
Bed, Vanity and Chiffonier.
Reg, $44.00
Now on Sale at $35.20
$5 Down $5 a Month
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3-piece Ivory Enamel
Suite
Bed, Vanity and Chiffonier
Reg. price $119.50
Now on sale at $79.95
$10 Down $10 a Month
3-piece Walnut Suite
Bed, Vanity and Chiffonier
Reg. $85.00
Special price $6S 00
$10 Down $5 a Month
3
3-piece Green Enamel
Suite
Bed, Vanity and Chiffonier
Reg. $119.00
April Sale Price $79 95
$10 Down $10 a Month
3-piece Walnut Suite
Bed, Dresser and Chiffonier
Reg. $55.50
Sale Price $ 41 40
$5 Down $5 a Month
Davenport and Chair
Six coverings to choose from.
Sanoweb guaranteed construction.
April Special $-49 95
$5 Down $5 a Month
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