t
SIX MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
hews
' By LEO H. PETERSEN
United Press Sports Editor
Milwaukee (IPi The Mil
waukee Braves, riding the gid
dy crest of Ed Mathews' "life
saver homer" were even money
today to take the series lead
over a New York Yankee team
whose hobbled slugger Mickey
Mantle was a question mark.
Thus, the whole series hung
for some 12 hours over the ques
tion of whether the Yankee su
per star would be available for
the final three games. The Yan
kees failed to beat the Brooklyn
Dodgers when Mantle was side
lined during much of the 1955
series.
That's how much respect the
Braves earned Sunday when
they bounced back for a 7-5 vic
tory after it appeared the Yan
kees were about to make the
"kill". The familiar pattern of
Yankee World Series victories
seemed to be asserting itself
when Elston Howard's three-run
homer tied it in the ninth and
Hank Bauer's lOth-inning triple
put the world champions in
front. But Mathews' homer
quickly reversed it.
So, even Whitey Ford. 3-1 vic
tor over the Braves in the open
er, was rated no better than
"even money" today when he
matches curves with Lew Bur
dette, a 4-2 winner over the
Yankees in the second game.
The Yankees still are 7-5 to win
the series.
Tuesday Off
Tuesday is an off-day for trav
el and then the series shifts
back to New York where the
sixth and seventh games could
be played on Wednesday and
Thursday.
Ford. 29, yielded only five
hits in last Wednesday's opener
and will be shooting for his
sixth World Series victory
only one less than the record
shared by ex-Yankee greats Red
Ruffing and Allie Reynolds. He
had an 11-5 record during the
American league season and is
essentially a curveball pitcher
that commands respect if not
awe.
Burdette pitched a seven-hitter
in the second game and shut
out the Yankees over the last
six innings. He's a low curve
ball pitcher frequently accused
of throwing the outlawed "spit
ter." He won 17 and lost nine
during the National league sea
son. Should the Braves go on to
give Milwaukee a world cham
pionship, Sunday's fourth game
will be singled out as the turn
ing point of the Series,
ripped right back. Tommy Byrne
gave them the opening when he
Boyd Takes
Auto Title
Gardena, Calif. W) Johnny
Boyd, Indianapolis 500 veteran
from 'Fresno, Calif., today held
the National Midget Auto rac
ing title of the United States
Automobile Club.
Boyd won the title Saturday
when he drove his London Of
fenhauser to a new Gardena sta
dium record of 25 minutes, 34
seconds' flat for the 100-lap
championship.
LEGAL NOTICES
NATIONAL FOREST TIMBER
FOR SALE
Oral auction bids will be received
by the Regional Forester, or his
authorized representative at the off?ce
of the Forest Supervisor. Post Office
Building. Medford. Oregon, beginning
. o nn n m . November 8. 1957. for
all merchantable timber marked or
desicnated for cutting on an area
embracing about 298 acres located
in a general sale area of 2.815 acres,
more or less, within sections 13, 16.
21 22. 27. 28. 33. & 34. T. 30 S R. 3 E..
and sections 4. 8, & 9, T. 31 S.. R. 3 E
XV M surveved. in the Flat Creek.
Woodruff Creek, and Rogue River
Watersheds. Rogue River National
Forest. Douglas and Jackson Counties.
Oregon. The estimated volumes are
18.700 M board feet of Douglas-fir.
2 800 M board feet of all species of
pine. 3.300 M board feet of white
fir and other species. The minimum
acceptable bid per M board feet is
as follows: Douglas-fir S19.25, all
species of pine $34.30. white fir and
other species S5.65. This includes the
following stumpage rates, per M board
feet: Douelas-fir $18.60. all species
of pine $33.65. white fir and other
species $5.00. plus $0.45 for sale area
betterment and $.20 for slash dis
posal tor all species: Provided. That
when 15.000 M board feet of Douglas
fir and when 2.100 M board feet of
pine, and when 2.780 M board feet of
white fir and other species have been
scaled and paid for. for each species
or species group, the sum of the
rates for stumpage and required de
posits for sale area betterment, for
each species or species group, will
be increased by $8.95 per M board
feet for Douglas-fir. $16.70 per M
board feet for all species of pine,
and $3.40 per M board feet for white
fir and other species. As a qualifica
tion for oral bidding, all bidders
must submit a sealed bid accompanied
bv the required payment to the
Forest Supervisor prior to 2:00 p.m..
November 8, 1957. Sealed bids will
be posted at the beginning of the
auction for the information of all
bidders. A money order, bank draft,
cashier's or certified check in the
sum of $34,000.00 must accompany
each bid. to be applied on the pur
chase price, refunded, or retained in
part as liquidated damages, according
to the conditions of sale. If requested
by the purchaser, contract terms will
permit felling of timber in advance
of payment up to the value of the
performance bond. If an oral bid
is declared to be high at the closing
of the auction, the bidder must im
mediately confirm the oral bid by
submitting it in writing on a Forest
Service bid form. The right to reject
anv and all bids is reserved. Forest
Service bid forms for use in submit
ting sealed bids and full information
concerning the timber, the conditions
of sale and the submission of bids
should be obtained from the District
Ranger. Union Creek Ranger Station.
Prospect. Oregon, the Forest Super
visor. Medford, Oregon, or the Reg
ional Forester, Portland. Oregon, be
iore bids are submitted.
Hlilwauke
Life-Saver Home Run Evens
e With MY Yanks
hit pinch-hitter Nippy Jones and
The Yankees weren't hitting
36-year-old Warren Spahn much
but they looked sharp and alert
as if they could smell the big
payoff coming and they tied it
at 4-4 with two out in the ninth
when Howard delivered his
Tony Kubek
Epitomized
Yank Mark
Milwaukee (IPI Tony Kubek
debuted as a major leaguer in
his hometown Saturday as a kid
who epitomizes Casey Stengel's
New York Yankees as opposed
to the Yankees of Babe Ruth tra
dition. The current trademark of the
Yankees is versatility. This is a
team that has always been
known as the team with the "big
sock" Ruth, DiMaggio, Keller,
Gehrig, Mantle, Berra and
there's plenty of "sock" in the
current squad. But Stengel has
transformed the team in his nine
years as manager and the change
he has brought about is that the
Yankees have a 25-man roster
that is equivalent to a 33 or 35
man roster that another man
ager wishes he had.
The reason for this is that
Stengel insists that his players
must play more than one posi
tion adequately. And Kubek is
his boy because certainly no 20-
year-old kid has ever before
played five different positions
for a pennant winner in his
rookie season.
Kubek has played all the in
field positions except first and
both left and center fields for
the Yankees this year. He makes
occasional errors at all positions
but handles "them all in such a
way that nobody seems to know
which will be his best.
Shoeshine
Helps Braves
Milwaukee (IP) A shoeshine
helped the Braves get all even
and may. yet mean a winning
$10,000 World Series share for
each Milwaukee player.
The record books will always
say the Braves polished off the
Yankees 7-5, Sunday on Eddie
Mathews homer. Milwaukee
players generally agreed today
the game-winning homer was
set up by a careless shine ap
plied to pinch -bitter Nippy
Jones shoes.
The Braves trailed, 5-4, when
Jones batted for winning pitch
er Warren Spahn to open the
last of the 10th. Southpaw Tom
my Burne, on the mound for the
Yankees, delivered a pitch to
Jones that plate umpire Augie
Donatelli first called a ball.
"That ball hit me," Jones said,
pointing to his left foot. "I mean
it. Take a look at the ball.
Donatelli inspected the ball,
found a black shoe polish mark
on it and awarded Jones first
base because there was the evi
dence, all right, in black and
white.
Felix Mantilla ran for Jones
and after moving up on a sacri
fice, scored the tying run on
Johnny Logan's double off Bob
Grim, Matthews followed with
the clincher.
Casey Stengel
Blows Fans Kiss
Milwaukee (IP) Manager
Casey Stengel of the New York
Yankees got used to the catcalls
years ago.
It's a good thing he did.
Milwaukee fans have given
him a rough time since his
Yankee, team reportedly snub
bed a civic welcome for them
here Friday. Every time Casey
leaves the protection of the dug
out, the jeers start, handkerchiefs
wave a younger man's ears would
burn.
"Is this bush team too much
for you," they ask. "Bush" is in
cluded in most of the jeers be
cause of a Yankee player's com
ment that the celebration for
them Friday was 'bush."
But Casey takes the jeers in
stride. Sunday, for example, in
a critical spot, he changed pitch
ers. The fans heaped abuse on
him but as he walked back to the
dugout, he blew them a kiss.
Woman Calls Herself
Braves' Luck Charm
Milwaukee (IP) The Milwau
kee Braves are a cinch to win
the World Series. Why? Because
Lillian (Lolly) Hopins is in the
stands.
The woman who calls herself
"Milwaukee's good luck charm"
was there Sunday when they
beat the New York Yankees, 7-5.
She had her box of tootsie rolls
with her, which she throws to
the players.
"Lolly," who says she is 67,
has been watching baseball
games "at least 45 years" in her
native Boston.
"I was sad when the Braves
left in '53 they were my favor
ite team," she said. "Now I
watch the Sox. That's only about
77 games a year." j
Monday. October 7, 1357
homer after singles by Yogi
Berra and Gil McDougald.
The Milwaukee bubble ap
peared to burst and the Braves
seemed to be dead injuns when
Kubek's single and Hank Bauer's
triple gave the Yankees a 5-4
lead in the 10th.
Braves Rip Back
But the Braves who have to
read those "choke-up" stories
every time they lose a game
the Braves suddenly were in
business because the next two
hitters were Red Schoendienst
and Johnny Logan.
Of all the Braves, these are
the two most versatile players
the sort that abound on the
Yankee squad. Haney, of course,
was bunting and Schoendienst
laid it down like the book says
it should be.
Then came the scrappy little
Logan and he showed 'em why
he's know as a clutch player
with a solid double into the left
field corner that tied it up. '
Now the Yankees had their
backs to the wall and Stengel
Ed Mathews
Sheds Collar
(Editor's r.ote: Eddie Math
ews squared the World Series
for the Braves today when he
smacked a two-run homer in
the 10th inning to defeat the
Yankees, 7-5. In the following
dispatch, he gives his impres
sions of the game.)
By EDDIE MATHEWS
As Told To The United Press
Milwaukee (IP) I was be
ginning to think I might be
"collared" in this World Series
but that ball I hit in the 10th
inning today was a horse of a
different color.
Before today's game I was
nothing-for-eight and after , I
went out in my first time at bat
against Tom Sturdivant in the
first inning I was beginning to
appreciate how Gil Hodges
must have felt when he went
hitless in the 1952 Series.
That fourth inning double of
mine broke the ice, though, and
that 10th inning homer darn
near put me in paradise.
I've had a lot of good things
happen to me in my lifetime,
like signing with the Braves,
hitting my first homer in the
majors and being a part of Mil
waukee's first pennant in history
two weeks ago. But today's hom
er is by far the high spot of my
baseball career.
Trying To Meet Ball
Actually, with Bob Grim
pitching out there for the Yan
kees, I was only trying to meet
the ball in the 10th. Grim re
minds me a lot of Jack Sanford
of the Phillies, only he throws
more overhand and isn't quite
as fast.
Anyway, he came in with a
fast ball after the count went to
two balls and two strikes and
I hit it a little bit on the end
of the bat.
That one's bye-bye I said to
myself as soon as I hit it. On my
way down the first base line,
though, I started to have some
doubts. A lot of things kept
coming into my mind.
Suppose the wind holds, the
ball up? Look at that Hank
Bauer. He's going like sixty and
I'll bet he's going to grab it.
But then I saw it go over the
fence and I knew my troubles
were over.
Maybe that wallop jolted
Grim somewhat but I'll clue
you: He wasn't one-half as shook
up as I was.
We've still got to win two
games and I think we will. And
now that I got rid of the "col
lar" I hope I keep it off.
Milwaukee City
Higher Than Kite
Milwaukee (IP) Milwaukee
was higher than a kite again
Sunday night.
For hours after Eddie Math
ews hit the game winning hom
er that gave Milwaukee a 7-5
victory over the Yankees, peo
ple shouted and horns tooted in
downtown Milwaukee.
Everywhere you went, people
were talking about the game. It
was pennant-clinching night all
over again.
There was a frantic saarch for
tickets and the prices vere high
er than ever.
We repair radiators and
gas tanks. Also Paint cars
with gleaming, glossy fin
ish which we guarantee
for as long as you keep
the car.
MITCHELL
Paint &
Radiator Shop
608 S. Riverside
Ph. SP 2-2745
V N
in Series
had to play for defense all the
way to stop the run. He moved
Kubek to center, took out
Mantle, and inserted 41-year-old
Enos Slaughter in left field.
Mathews didn't make a hit in
the first three games, but he
had rapped a solid double in the
fourth inning and he put a 2-2
pitch into the right field bleach
ers that turned County stadium
and perhaps all Milwaukee into
a bedlam of noise.
It was the big hit of a big
ball game and it could just be
that it was the one that put
the Braves on the glory road.
BOX:
New York AB R H O . A
Kubek, If 5 12 10
Bauer, rf 5 0 10 0
Mantle, cf 5 10 10
Slaughter, If 0 0 0 0 0
Berra, c 3 12 8 0
McDougald, ss . 4 12 12
Howard, lb 4 1 1 13 0
Collins, lb 0 0,0 0 1
Carey, lb 4 0 114
Coleman, 2b 4 0 1 3 4
Sturdivant, p 1 0 0 0 1
A-Simpson 1 0 0 0 0
Shantz, p 0 0 0 0 0
B-Lumpe 1 0 1 0 0
Kucks, p 0 0 0 0 0
Byrne, p 1 0 0 0 0
Grim, p 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 38 5 11 x28 12
Milwaukee AB R H O A
Schoendienst, 2b 4 0 1 3 3
Logan, ss 4 1 1 1 10
Mathews, 3b 4 2 2 1 4
Aaron, cf 3 12 10
CovingtonJ I 4 0 0 0 0
Torre, lb -. 3 1 1 15 1
C-Adcock, lb 10 0 10
Hazle, rf 2 0 0 2 0
Pafko, rf 2 0 0 3 0
Crandall, c 4 0 0 2 0
Spahn, p 3 0 0 1 2
D-Jones 0 0 0 0 0
E-Mantiila 0 10 0 0
Totals 34 7 ' 7 30 20
X-On out when winning run
scored.
A-Hit into double play for Sturdi
vant in 5th.
B-Singled for Shantz in 8th.
C-Grounded out for Torre in 9th.
D-Hit by pitch for Spahn in 10th.
E-Ran for Jones in 10th.
New York 100 000 003 15
Milwaukee 000 400 000 3 7
RBI McDougald, Howard 3. Bauer,
Aaron 3. Toore, Logan, Mathews 2.
2B Mathews, Carey, Schoendienst,
Logan. 3B Bauer. HR Aaron, Torre,
Howard. Mathews. SB Covington. S
Schoendienst. DP Schoendienst,
Toore; Logan, Schoendienst, Torre 2.
LOB New York 4, Milwaukee 4. BB
Spahn 1. Sturdivant 1. Shantz 1,
Kucks 1. SO Sturlivant 1. Shunt 4
Spahn 2. Kucks 1, Byrne 1. HO
aturaivant 4 in 4, Shantz 0 in 3,
Kucks 1 in Byrne 0 in l'a. Pitched
to 1 batter in 10th, Grim 2 in V3.
ER Sturdivant 4-4. Byrne 1-1, Grim
2-2, Spahn 5-5. HBP Bvrne-.Tnnes
Winner Spahn. Loser Grim. U
uonatein w, Fiate: Paparella A, lb;
Conlan N. 2b: McKinlev A. 3h- Phvlak
A. Secory N, foul lines. T 2:31. A
Johnny Logan
Claims Victory
In Psychology
Milwaukee HP) Battling
Johnny Logan, a distinct under
dog, explained with obvious rel
ish today how he earned the de
cision in a psychological bout
with canny Casey Stengel.
It happened in. the crucial
10th inning of Sunday's game,
As Logan was about to step
into the batter's box, Casey
called time and took Mickey
Mantle out of the game because
of a sore shoulder.
Stengel put Tony Kubek into
Mantle's center field spot and
Enos Slaughter in left field in
place of Kubek.
"Casey thought all that delay
was going to make me anxious,
Logan explained . . . but I made
up my mind that it wouldn't
bother me if I had to wait until
doomsday."
When Logan finally stepped
into the batter's box, he took
two balls before swining at a
slider which he drove for a dou
ble that scored Felix Mantilla
with the tying run.
WITH
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Big 10 Fight
Begins For
Bowl Spot
By GENE BLUDEAU
United Press Sports Writer
Chicago OP) The Big Ten's
battle xfor the Rose Bowl berth
begins in earnest this weekwith
five conference games on tap
after two weeks of non-conference
practice.
Minnesota and Michigan State
were the early pacemakers, the
Spartans because of a 54-0 open
ing day win over Indiana and
Minnesota by virtue of a 21-17
decision over rugged Purdue
Saturday.
This weekend Michigan State
will face intra-state rival Michi
gan at Ann Arbor in perhaps the
best game in the nation, .while
Minnesota will travel to North
western to face virtually the
same team which battled the
Golden Gophers to a scoreless
tie a year ago, possibly costing
them 'a Rose Bowl chance.
Spartans and Gophers Get Nod
Michigan State and Minnesota
probably will be favorites for
the games, but either one could
be upset.
In the other conference clashes
unbeaten Iowa, ineligible for the
bowl because it won the title
and played in the post-season
classic last year, will be at In
diana, Illinois travels to Ohio
State, and Wisconsin appears at
Purdue.
Only Iowa was out of the bowl
contention due to ineligibility.
Wisconsin is unbeaten and plays
its first league game. Ohio State
and Illinois, each with one win
and one loss, both are bowl eli
gibles. The Michigan State-Michigan
scrap will match two unbeaten
teams, but while Minnesota has
won both its starts, Northwest
ern has lost both of its games
to non-conference rivals.
Meaty Part
Of Season
This Week
By TIM MORIARTY
United Press Sports Writer
The preliminaries out of the
way, college football heads into
the "meaty" part of the season
this week with two star attrac
tions Army vs. Notre Dame
and Michigan vs. Michigan State.
The powerful Cadets and the
rebounding Irish will meet at
Philadelphia for the first time
since 1947, when their classic
series was discontinued by mu
tual agreement.
In games this season, Notre
Dame followed up a 12-0 opening-game
victory over Purdue
by blanking Indiana, 26-0, last
Saturday. Army galloped to a
27-13 victory over Perm State
for its" second straight victory.
So the long-awaited Irish-Cadet
series renewal shapes up as a
showdown between a solid Notre
Dame line and Army's raft of
breakaway runners.
Next Saturday's Michigan vs.
Michigan State game at Ann Ar
bor should prove whether either
team has the stuff to challenge
defending champion Oklahoma
for this year's national title.
In other major games next
weekend involving top-ranked
teams, Minnesota visits North
western, Texas A&M entertains
Houston, Oregon State hosts
Idaho, Navy visits California,
Iowa is at Indiana, Duke visits
Rice, and . Auburn entertains
Kentucky.
Always Listening
Li1 Ole Radio-Active Jack
ten ur Rewashed News
7:25 a.m. KBOY
by LINIUGER'S
BY TEST
Phone:
SPring 2-5336
SPring 2-5897
MUrdock 5-8121
Ike Logart,
Miteff Risk
Ring Ranks
New York (IP) Welterweight
contender Isaac Logart and
heavyweight contender Alex
Miteff risk their prestige and
rankings this week in fights
with long-shot underdogs.
Logart of Cuba meets Joe Mi
celi of Brooklyn in a nationally
televised and broadcast 10
rounder (NBC) at the Detroit
Olympia, Friday night.
Cuban Ike, ranked second
among 147-pound contenders, is
taking the bigger gamble; for a
defeat by Miceli might prevent
his being included in the tourna
ment for the vacant welter title.
Logart is a 4-1 favorite, but
Miceli a dangerous in - and -outer
has staged many an upset
such as his knockout over ex-
champion Johnny Saxton on
Sept. 6. He is a good puncher,
particularly with the left upper-
cut.
The week's boxing schedule
includes:
Monday New York St. Nick's
Jimmy Slade vs. Jerry Lue-
dee, Nottingham, Eng. Hogan
(Kid) Bassey vs. Sergio Capari
(non-title).
Tuesday Revere, Mass. Ed
Andrews vs. Paulie Triffy; Rich
mond, Calif. Bob Butcher vs.
Tommy Fields; San Jose, Calif.
Willie Morton vs. Kid Centella;
Halifax, N.S. Yvon Tuerenne
vs. Gerry Fraser; London Jim
my Carter vs. Willie Toweel.
Wednesday Syracuse, N.Y.
Alex Miteff vs. Mike Dejohn. .
Thursday Los Angeles En
rique Aceeves vs. Pete Kawula;
Manila, P.I. Flash Elorde vs.
Leo Alonzo.
Friday Detroit Isaac Logart
vs. Joe Micelli.
Saturday Hollywood, Calif.
Orlando Zuelueta vs. Don Jor
dan; Watsonville, Calif. Leo
Agbulos vs. Julian Valdez.
Football Scores
SATURDAY COLLEGE GAMES
Sac. St. 44. Moffett Fd. 25
Arizona St. 34, Cal Poly 7
Whittier 34, N. Mex. Highlands 0
WWCE 7, Puget Sound 7
San Diego St. 38, Laverne Q
Willamette 25, L & C 14
Seattle Ram. 26, Pacific 7
OCE 34, EOC 13
Everett 61, Lawrence Col. 6
Yakima Val. 20, Grays Harbor 13
Olympic 24, Wenatchee 14
PLC 26, UBC 0
DePauw 26. Indiana St. 6
S. Dakota 27, N. Dakota 27
Drake 19. N. Texas St. 6 v
Tempe St. 44. San Jose St. 1
Prep Scores
SATURDAY FOOTBALL
Cottage Grove 14, Dallas 10
Tillamook Catholic 27, Concordia 19
Granger, Wash. 41, Fossil 21
Gaston 26. Star of the Sea 7
A team match scheduled Sun
day between men golfers of
Rogue Valley Country club and
Redding, Calif., was cancelled
because of wet weather, it was
reported this morning.
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Webfoots Loom Better Bet
To Gain Rose
By SCOTT BAILLIE
United Press Sports Writer
Oregon's Ducks, rated good
bets to go to the Rose Bowl,
looked even better today in the
backwash of an otherwise "lost
week end" for West Coast teams
which dropped five out of eight
intersectional contests.
The Webfoots posted a re
sounding 21-0 victory over
UCLA Saturday night one week
after making Pittsburgh sweat
to pull out a 6-3 win in the
closing seconds.
The big Oregon line stopped
most UCLA thrusts cold.
Earlier, Pittsburgh took ad
vantage of sloppy-t a c k 1 i n g
Southern California and downed
the Trojans, 20-14, Friday night.
Black Saturday
This set the scene for a black
Saturday in which Michigan
State downed California, 19-0;
Rice trampled Stanford, 34-7;
Iowa clipped Washington State,
20-13, and Ohio State scrapped
Washington, 35-7.
On the victory side, Oregon
State's undefeated Beavers
downed Northwestern, 22-13,
Idaho surprised Utah, 21-6, and
College of the Pacific rallied to
beat Tulsa, 21-13.
Arizona State of Temple
smashed San Jose State, 44-6, in
another leading clash.
California's Bears made the
high-ranking Spartans take to
the air for their nationally-televised
win after stopping them
on the ground twice within
scoring distance.
Three of Stanford's first
stringers, headed by quarterback
Jack Douglas, were injured and
stayed out of the second half
against Rice but it probably
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Bowl Berth
wouldn't have made much dif
ference.
Iowa Edges Cougars
Iowa, slowed up by flu,
launched a 54-yard touchdown
drive in the final period to
break a 13-13 tie after tackle
Alex Karras had stolen the ball
from Cougar quarterback Bob
Newman. .
Washington battled Ohio
State to a 7-7 halftime tie then
collapsed in the second stanza.
Earnel Durden sped to two
touchdowns, one on a pass from
Joe Francis who also scored, a
Oregon State beat penalty
West Coast win.
Idaho's Howard Willis scored
all three touchdowns as the Van
dals gobbled up Utah fumbles
to score an upset.
JOEY MEETS WILF
Denver, Colo. (IP) Joey Gi
ardello of Philadelphia will
meet Wilf Graves of Pittsburgh
in a 10-round middleweight bout
at the Denver Coliseum, Oct. 29,
it was announced today by pro
moter Milt Willner. Giardello
knocked out Bobby Lane in his
last fight.
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Drain Tile
727
W. McAndrews
Ph. SP 2-4107
More people coast to coast
borrow money from HFC
than from any other con
sumer finance company.
They like our friendly, one
day service. They know they
may borrow up to $1500 and
take up to 24 months to re
pay. If you need cadi for
any good purpose, use the
service that's backed by 79
years' experience. Phone or
visit HFC today.
St., 2nd Floor
SP 3-5301
wmMH
290 $A45
PT. Q.
.
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