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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 3, 1961)
TUESDAY, JANUARY I, 1961 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, ORE. t -a 1 ' Duke Scores 7-6 Upset Victory Dallas, Tex.-IUPD-Duke'i , was really lonesome without an Arkansas man around him ', when he caught the nine-yard pass that propelled the Blue ; Devils to an upset 7-6 victory over Arkansas in the Cotton Bowl. It was such a neat bit of ' Blue Devil trickery that ' Duke's Don Altman pulled on ' the usually quick wilted : Razorback that Arkansas was ; sucked into defense of an out- side reverse running play, : leaving Moorman - the na : tion's No. 1 receiver - ell ; alone in the end zone. ! Fancy Fakery Some fancy fakery by Arkansas' Lance Alworth had paved the way for the Razor- backs' touchdown earlier, but ' the difference in the game KC Shakeup Is Rumored " Kansas City, Mo. - 4UP1I - A . shakeup is brewing in the ; front office of the Kansas City ; Athletics and Parke Carroll '. Is expected to be relieved as general manager. United Press International : learned today from a reliable ! source that Carroll will be relieved before the Athletics begin spring training, but that : lie will remain with the club : as vice president. ; He has been serving in the . dual capacity of vice presi , dent and general manager. ; Fans Critical of Carroll Carroll, a onetime Kansas '. City sports writer, has been widely criticized by Athletics ' fans for some of the recent trades with the New York I Yankees. He was blamed for ; the trade which sent home run king Bob Cerv to the i Yankees for injury-plagued ; third baseman Andy Carey, and also was accused for ped , dling Roger Maris to New ; York in a multiple-player ; deal. ' '. Many of the Kansas Cily I New York trades, however, ; were manufactured by the late Arnold Johnson, who died ! last year while in Florida lo watch the A's train. ' End "Farm Club" Adage ' New A's owner Charles Fin ! ley of Gary, Ihd., promised ' upon purchasing, the eontrol- ling interest in the club that : he intends )o put an end to ; the adage that the Kansas City team is a Yankee farm i club. And, although he ad ; inlts he intends to retain Car ; roll "because of his vast base ! ball knowledge," he . did not promise to keep him as gen ; nral manager and vice prest ' dent. . '' " I Finley reportedly is pleaded.' to have Joe Gordon as man ' ager. The one-time Cleveland ! and Detroit manager recently I signed a two-year contract to skipper the Athletics. ' The new A's owner declined ; to cpmmenl on other possible 1 personnel changes in the or- ganization. Oregon By MILT CUYMON i Portland - "this is the time of year when ' game agents " throughout the state travel far ' and wide conducting inventor " ies on Oregon's big game re- " sources. It's an annual task that begins shortly after the hunting seasons and continues - through the winter Into March 7 or April. First phase of the big game - Inventories is herd compost Z tion studies to determine the ; ratio of bucks, does, and - fawns on each range. Biolo- - gists begin gathering herd . composition information im- mediately after the hunting seasons are over when they make a systematic survey of ( all big game ranges. All aul- - mals observed are classified as to sex and age and express- ; cd in a ratio to the number - of bucks or bulls, fawns or - calves per 100 adult females. . Herd composition must be ; completed before buck deer I or bull elk lose their antlers. " By mid-January herd compo- sitlon on deer is no longer " feasible as bucks rapidly shed their beams, and by early Feb .' ruary there Is little rcscm ; blance to the proud animals nimrods observed during the . hunting seasons. Elk often re ; tnin their antlers as late as Mid-march before the massive ". beams are dropped and new I growth begins. ; Antelope by Air ' Surveys are made by auto ' mobile, on foot, horseback, " and on some ranges by air- plane. Almost without exrep- tion surveys on antelope arc : made from the air, preferably : when snow Is on the ground. At this time the animals are . bunched on the winter ranges ; and the short sage country In which the animals live makes ', aerial observation quick, easy, ; and accurate. Some elk herds are also censused by airplane, ! especially in rough, mountain country which prohibits ' other means of travel. Deer ' rauuei are travelled primarily ' by horse brk, although on ' ume rig. depending on now, sample routes arc tun "lonesome end," Tee Moorman, came when Duke end Dave Unser blocked Mickey Cis sell's try for the extra point while Duke's Art Browning converted perfectly. Alworth, the nation's No. 1 punt returner and voted the outstanding back in this silver anniversary Cotton Bowl game, had put Arkansas out in front in the third quarter with a 49-yard punt return and had to fake Duke safety man Randy Clark "out of his boots" to do it. He left Clark standing flatfooted 10 yards away with his darting fake. Arkansas Coach Frank Broyles, stunned by the great Duke comeback surge of 73 yards for the winning touch down, called the Duke touch down play "perfect execu tion," but said that the Blue Devils' passes to Moorman on key third downs hurt his team a great deal. The comeback was a real tribute to the team's determ ination in the mind of Blue Devil Coach Bill Murray. Raider Office Head Resigns Oakland, Calif, -IUPII- The Oakland Raiders were search Ing for a new general man ager today following the resig nation of Y. C. "Chet" Soda Soda Monday resigned his post as president and general manager ' but said he would slay on as one of the team's eight owners. Raider ' head coach Eddie Erdelatz, rumored as a possi ble candidate for Soda's post, said he had no desire for the Job. "I'm not old enough to quit coaching," he said, "but it would be too much for me to take on the general manager's Job as well." With Erdelatz out of the pic ture, Paul Hastings, the assist ant general manager, appear ed to have the Inside track on the job. The Raiders dropped an estimated $400,000 in their first season of operation in the new American Football league. '; TITLE NOT AT STAKE ' Paris - IUPII - Davey Moore's featherweight championship will not be at stake next Mon day night when he, opposes Gracleux Lampei'tl in a 10 round bout at the Palais des Spprts. Willy K e t c h u m, Moore's manager, said "a friendly agreement" not to have the crown at stake was reached when the French pro moters failed to put up the money guarantee contracted Game Inventory Being Conducted by automobile as well as foot travel by snowshoe. Rain, snow, wind, and cold are no deterrent, for game agents must travel in all kinds of weather if the status of Ore gon's big game herds is to be accurately determined. Na ture's hand Is at work around the calendar affecting the big game herds through the sea sons. Contrary to the fall hunting seasons enjoyed by Oregon sportsmen, the winter months might aptly be called the hunting season for game agents where l.n llw cold and snow they hunt out the big game animals, watch them as tlwy so, through the winter, slutly their fowl supplies, keep a critical eye on. herd condilion, record, mortality, sex, and age and the number of animals observed on each range. GAME MEN WORK FAST This proud trophy bui.k sunn Vill lose us auuers as ine herds concentrate on the bleak, snowbound ranges In the dead of winter. New growth will begin la iiirtng and develop Uiruuftu. FLEMING DRIVES George Fleming was driving on this play during yesterday's Rose Bowl at Pasadena, Calif. Fleming accounted for Washington's first points as he booted Ole Miss New Orleans - IUPII - Every body ought to be happy today -even the loser in the 27th annual Sugar Bowl game. Mississippi proved that it was as good as everybody said it was, and Rice proved it was better than most people thought by holding Ole Miss lo a narrow 14-6 victory. The Rebels were favored by 10 points, but it looked for awhile" as if they would be lucky to win by one, al though the outcome never really seemed in doubt. Lack Experience Coach Jess Neely's Owls' main hindrance was a lack of experience, but for sopho mores, quarterbacks Billy Cox and Ratidv Kerbow did an ex Rogue, Jackson Leagues Open Rivalry Rogue and Jackson County B leagues begin their slates and the Southern Oregon con ference has its second week of contention this week- In prep basketball. Friday nigiit games In the A-2 Rogue league will have Lakeview at Eagle Point, Phoenix nt Illinois Valley and Hcnrey at Rogue River. On Saturday night Henley will be at Eagle Point and Lakeview at Rogue River. There is just one B loop fracas this week with Pros pect at. Butte Kails. Friday tangles in the a-i Southern Oregon circuit are Herd composition doesn't complete the winter surveys and about live first of Febru ary game agents start all over again, this time to census animals numbers on each big game winter range. Observa tion continues until the herds disband with the spring breakup. Although herd composition may be conducted throughout the ranges and at all eleva tions, the annual census is more or less confined to the winter ranges at lowed alti tudes, v During the lale winter snows are deep In the moun tain ranges, forcing big game animals ever downward lo the biviiks and scablands near the valley floors.. Animals from an entire watershed cov ering thousands of square miles may be forced by the winter snows and cold into a narrow belt a few miles long the summer Into die beautiful racks prucd uy huniers. Game ant-nts must work fasi during early winter to classify bucks, does and fawns In each herd before antlers e shed, Ulioin faim vnmimpuin) u 9 a field goal shown being Bill Munsey 17-7. Wins Sugar Bowl emplary job of directing the team. Mississippi, winning its fourth straight bowl game and its second straight Sugar Bowl, had the essence of the perennial winner - it could almost always come up with the big play. The big plays in Monday's affair were four interceptions of Rice passes, two of which stemmed touchdown - bound drives. Rice tried and failed three times before it was able to push across its touchdown. The Owl defense was its stellar point, however. Missis sippi's only threats - until the closing moments of the game vhen Rice apparently realized all was lost - were This Week Medford at Grants Pass and Klamath Falls at Ashland. Ashland will encounter Crater at Central Point on Saturday night and Klamath Falls goes lo Grants Pass. Anon-league scrape toni.ght has Rogue River at Prospect. St. Mary's journeys to Riddle pn Friday. At the freshman level Mc Laughlin is at Hedrick on Friday afternoon and Crater entertains North Grants Pass. On the senior high wres tling front Grants Pass has a return match at Medford on Friday everting. Crater Will go to Roscburg on Saturday. by a mile or so wide. Heaviest concentration of animals will be found In the food produc ing areas within the belt. Critical Time. This is the critical time of year and the time which game agents dread the most. For if the winter is long and severe they will witness first hand many animals dying of cold and hunoer. There Is llille to worry about during mild winters, broken by periods of thawing and sunshine. During such winters, animals remain scat tered at all elevations of the winter range and mnnnge lo find enough food to keep them healthy and alert. But hunger alone, is the driving force wficn snow piles deep or temperatures drop to sub-zero levels, The winter range produces limited food supplies to begin with and when much of it is buried be- in the first quarter. He is stopped by Minnesota halfback (28). Washington won the clash . (UPI. Telephoto) turned into its two touch downs. Gibbs Outstanding Player Jake, -Gibbs, the All-America Rebel quarterback, was the outstanding player of the game his last with Missis sippi. .'Although Gibb's pass ing was well below his aver age - 5 of 15 - they were big ones and he also suffered from unaccountably butter fingered receivers. On one oc casion, fjiree straight passes dribbled out of the hands of, his targets. Jim Arl-derson was the big rusher for Mississippi, as he was ail year, although Gibbs scored both touchdowns on runs. Rice outdid. Mississippi in the statistics, but most of Rice's action was between the 20-yard lines. Lindquist and Koblik Win Golf Sweepstakes Ray Lindquist fired a 75 lo win low gross honors in the golf sweepstakes tourna ment held Saturday and Sunday at Rogue Valley country club. ' Bud Brooks and Dr. Ralph Odell fashioned 77s to trail Lindquist. Dave Koblik won low net honors with a 67. Floyd Pickell and Howard Cuiic , finished second with 69s. Ray Mencke and Dr. Ralph Thompsen finished fourth, with 70 each. FIGHTS By United Pren International New York (St. Nicholas Arena) - IUPII - Rodolfo Diaz 178V4, Buenos Aires, stopped Clarence Floyd, 173, New York City (8). rieath deep snow, competition is- keen for the meager sup plies that remain. Danger is forgotten, senses dulled, ex cept the gnawing urge for food, and even this may be come dulled in time. Under such conditions many animals may starve before spring, with fawns the first to go followed by old animals and yearlings. Extreme cold may also take a heavy toll, mainly of'weakened animals unable from the meager food supplies to generate body heat to withstand the frigid tem peratures. Sample Routes Permanent sample routes are established on all big game winter ranges.! Small winter ranges may have only two or three sample routes, while large ranges may have a dozen or more traversing at intervals from low lo high ele vations. These routes are travelled systematically. A 1 1 animals observed are recorded and ex pressed in the ratio of animals observed per mile of travel. Mortality is also recorded and expressed in the same man ner. Records on all ranges are kept from year to year and comparisons made to deter mine if the herds are increas ing, decreasing, or remaining constant. Some 7,000 miles of sample route are travelled each year by game agents to determine the status of the big game herds. attemplTj made to count all big game animals. This has long been recognized as impossible. If the trend in numbers can be accurately de termined game managers arc satisfied. Q 0 The winter surveys give an accurate picture of the popu lation trends, numbers of buck deer or bull elk in each herd, fawn or calf production, mortalities, range condition? and food supplies. This and other information gathered around the calendar serve as a basis for next year's hunt ing tcaioni. Two Touchdowns and Field Goal Give Washington 1 7-7 Bowl Win Bucks Are Undisputed Top Team New York -ttJPD- Ohio Stale, which remained undefeated by winning the Holiday Bas ketball Festival in New York, missed a perfect score in the United Press International ratings by a single point to day for the third time this season. Following t h e Buckeyes' tournament-victories over St. John's and St. Bonaventure, two strong Eastern teams rated among last week's first five, 34 of the 35 coaches who comprise the UPI rating board again voted Coach Fred lay lor's defending national cham pions No. 1 in the nation. One coach, however, cast his ballot in favof of runner- up: Bradley and picked Ohio State No. 2. That gave the Buckeyes 349 out of a possible 3S0 points Until this season, no team ever had scored that high in the weekly UPI ratings. Ohio State now has led the nation five straight weeks. Bradley, which stretched its winning streak to 10 with a pair of non-tournament tri umphs last week, remained in second place for the fifth week in a row. The Braves' 264 points left them 85 be hind Ohio State. North Carolina, Kansas State and Iowa were this week's newcomers in the top 10 group following holiday tournament championships. North Carolina (7-2) won the Dixie Classic and jumped from 11th to 5th place; Kansas State (9-2) took the Big Eight lournamenl and moved from 12th to 7th: while Iowa (8-1), unranked last week, vaulted into the No. 9 spot following its triumphs in the Los An geles Classic. St. Bonaventure, beaten 84- 82 by Ohio State in the Holi day Festival final, moved up. one place to No. 3, while St.- John's, which lost to the Buck eyes by 5 points in the tourney-: semifinals dropped one notch to No. 4. -' Louisville, with an 11-game winning- streak, ia d ,v a n c e d from 9th to 6th place; UCLA was 8th, Iowa 9th and Duke remained 10th. Indiana, beaten twice in the Los Angeles Classic, St. Louis and Detroit dropped out of the lop 10 group. Detroit. St. Louis and In diana were the first three teams in the second 10 group in that order. Vanderbilt, Utah and West Virginia's Su gar Bowl champions were tied for No. 14, followed by Wichi ta, Kansas and Auburn. There was a 5-team tie for the 20 .h ranking among Mem? liis State, Providence, North Carolina State, Southern Cali fornia and Iowa State. New York-IDM-The Unit id Press International col lege basketball ratings (with first-place votes and won-lost records in paren theses); Team Points 1. Ohio State (34, 9-0) 349 2. Bradley (1. 10-0) 264 3. St. Bonaventure (9-1) 243 4. SI. John's (8-1) 168 5. North Carolina (7-2). 164 6 Louiiville (11-0) 124 7. Kansas Stale (9-2) .103 8. UCLA (7-2) 89 9. Iowa (8-1) 81 10. Duke (9-1) 69 11. Detroit (52); 12, St. Louis (48); 13, Indiana (45): 14, (tie) Vanderbilt, Utah and West Virginia (12 each); -17. Wichita (11): IB, Kansas :..(10); Auburn '(8); 0 (tie) Memphis Stale, Pro vidence, North Carolina Staii;, Southern California and Iowa State (7 each). Mays and Wife Are Feuding New Rochelle, N.Y. - 0IPII -Willie Mays, San Francisco Giants outfielder, packed most of his wardro'.e al a television set into his car anJ left his sv,ank 15-rootn house here during tho Week fcnd, it was reported today. p His f.fn KargUvrito, re fused to deny or confirm re ports that she an(3 My-j ti'o separating. Friends close to the family told newsmen that on New Year's Eve Ma.vs moved tiut of the $75,000 home he pu chased on exclusive Croft Terrace about six rj-onths Mrs. Mays, twice oivorccci wIil.i she married the star outfielder Feb. 14, 1956, in Elkton, Md., conceded ,'iere had been "frictions" between them. But she would not say whether cither is takinac- tion toward permanent separ ation or divorce. Mavs was believed to be heading for Birmingham, Ala., where members of his family live, to startoMvorce proceed ings, friends taid. Huskies Claim National Title Pasadena, Calif.-IDPD-Washlngton's two-time Rose Bowl victors today laid claim to championship honors as a result of the Huskies 17-7 victory over top-ranked Minnesota. Both Coach Jim Owens and1 Washington quarterback Bob Schloredt, voted the "Player of the Game" for the second straight year, felt Washington had" deposed Minnesota as the national champion football team- "It - was a championship bout and when you win a championship match don't you get "the title?" Owens asked in reply to whether he considered his Huskies the top team in the nation as a result of' Monday's win. Schloredt, who emerged as one of the nation's top foot ball stars despite being un able to see in one eye as a result of a childhood acci dent, added, "I don't think the Gophers are the country's No. 1 team now." Two Football Games The 97,314 fans who jammed the Rose Bowl for the 47th annual New Year's holiday classic actually saw two football games. The Huskies won the game in the first half when they ppored 17 points, and the Minnesota Gophers had the edge both in ground-gaining and scoring in the second half when they had a 7-0 margin of su periority. But football being a game of two halves, the Huskies today received the acclaim of the football world for being the only Western team to beat the Big Ten twice in a row since the Midwestern con ference and the coast have been playing in the Rose Bowl on a yearly basis.'. Schloredt Sparks Huskies There was no question in the minds of the spectators that Schloredt was the spark that ignited the fire the Huskies put into their game. The rugged quarterback pass ed three yards for .one touch down, and ran for the other, scoring from the one, with halfback George Fleming kicking a 44-yard field goal and two conversions fc the rest of Washington's points. Jackson, Root Win Indoor Net Crowns Ashland - Jim Jackson and John Root emerged chatnps in close competition in men's and college men's singles, re spectively, in the Southern Oregon Indoor Tennis tourna ment h.ere. A husband ana wife team, Ellis and Valerie Williamson, Eureka, Calif., took home three first place trophies at the conclusion of the tourney which opened Saturday a.id ended yesterday in the South ern Oregon college gymna sium. Jackson, Portland, claimed men's singles honors after subduing Ellis Williamson, 6-3, 6-4 in the holiday finale. Root, Medford, was victor over Jerry Joy, Ashland, 4-6, 6-3, 6-3, in the college men's concluder. Take Mixed Doubles Mr. and Mrs. Williamson combined in mixed doubles for a 7-5, 6-3 win over an AShlund brother and sister team, Jerry and Julie Joy. Jack Yieder, Eureka, and Mr. Williamson too the men's dou bles title match from the Port land father and son duo, Phil and Jim Jackson, 7-5, 7-5. Mrs. Williamson defeated Kathy Schultz, Grants Pass, 6-0, 6-2 for the women's tro phy. Junior vets championship was claimed by Earl Brooks, Klamath Falls, after a 6-1, 6-1 verdict over Yieder in that division's finisher. In the hotly contested men's singles, Jim Jackson beat Jt- Tluee Games On Tonight's Schedule By United Press International 3 Thrca baskotball games aro on tap tonight foj Oregon col leeg basketball squsit. East ern 'bresOB downed Whitman 0-19 at La Grrf-o Motvday nM-.t. Uaivor-Hif of Pertlur, J'.? Pi lots will m.rrt hleh-ircorii-j;. Scatt'ff University at (Seattle i th first of foul' contci bctwve;- tti?j t5Vo Northwest independents. Seattle and Portland both competed In the H'fth annual Far ifVest classic at Port&.id last week 'with Seattle finish ing second to Oregon State and Portland finishing sixth. In other action Portland State tangles with Lewis and Clark and Orison College of Education travels to Forest Grove to meet Pacific Univer- post - season national collegiate Minnesota had its heroes in a losing match. Coach Murray Warmath singled out All- America guard Tom Brown for his all-around line play, end Tom Hall for a great defensive effort and' quarter back Sandy ' Stephens, who was Minnesota's l'e a d i n'e ground-gainer with a 5.1 yajdj average on lp carries. ';?f A break set up the lone Minnesota touchdown. -The Gophers took the opening kickoff of the second half and marched to the Washington 35 where the -Huskies lield for" downs when end Stan Chappie held fullback Roger Hagberg for no gam on fourth down. But on the very first play after that stand, quarterback Bob Hivner fumbled and Go pher end Bob Deegan recov ered on the 35. On the third play Stephens pitched out to halfback Bill Munsey, who raced 18 yards to score. Triumph Is Credited To Tactics . Pasadena-fllPD-A little mil ter of strategy, used on the first three Washington offen sive plays of the game, was being credited today with the Huskies 17-7 victory over Minnesota in the Rose Bowl. Quarterback Bob Schloredt, voted the "outstanding player of the game" for the second year in a row, gave the credit to the Husky coac'ies-and the execution by starting quarter back Bob Hivner. "The first three p'lays we called set the pattern of the game for us," said Schloredt. "Our coaching staff said if we ran a few plays up the middle, we would bring in their defense. Sure enough, it worked. , "We pulled them in, then we ran wide the rest of the time." ry Joy and Williamson won from Brooks, in the semi finals; Root eliminated Keith Baxter, Klamath: Falls, 'a n d Joy beat Teddy Jacksqn.'Port land, in the college men's sin gles. There were eight entries in men'a singles, six each -in col lege men's -and Juniorveter ans and. six-each inimen's'and mixed doubles. Robertson Has Top NBA Field Goal Average New York - fflPlI - Oscar Robertson is unlikely to win the individual scoring title in his rookie National Basketball association season but he may achieve an unprecedented all round offensive performance. Oificial NBA statistics re veal today that the Cincinnati Royal star is leading in field goal percentage and assists, ranks third in scoring behind Elgin Baylor and Wilt Cham berlain and is fifth in free throw percentage. This marks the first lime in NBA history that any player nns ranked so high in so many offensive departments. Robertson, who has scored 1217 points for a 30.4 aver, age, has a .475 field goal pc--"entae and has 371 assists for a 8.3 average. He's made 3fi5 of 437 free throw tries for r.i ,S35 percentage. Dnylor, 6-5, 225-pound ace of the Los Anodes Lakers, leidi Philadelphia's Chamber Icin by 20 point?, 1305 to 12&7, but Iws played three miVc i3a;:',e?. Chamberlain's avprse if 88.7 comparejl to Baylor's H4.8. Ch-dinb' -rliiH to !!, tp re bounder with a 27. T af-r; while Dtj'.iih Sdiay' ?.f C;c yrj3!Js Nation! rt& in fr-s throw "rccri'.isr; fitli BRILL METAL WORKS Commercial Industrial Reiidcntiil Shttt Metal Work Stainless, Galvanized and Copper Fabrication 2287 West Main 3 PHONi SP 2-4440 Tigers Top Navy 21-14 At Miami MiamMUPD-Missourl's testy Tigers, six points behind and with the White House against them, clawed from behind to chew up Navy 21-14 in the blossom scented Orange Bowl football game. While huge blowers wafted orange blossom perfume over the crowd of 71,218, the Ti gers caught the smell of vic tory and won their first bowl game in seven tries. Pulling for them to lose a seventh time was President elect John F. Kennedy, an ex Navy, torpedo boat officer whose influence couldn't help the Middies. Neither did the reputation, of All-American halfback Joe Bellino. Missouri's thundering line,-with giant end Dan La Rose in the van, stopped the chunky Bellino and held Navy to a minus eight yards rush ing for the game. Just Too Strong "They were just too strong," admitted saddened Navy Coach Wayne Hardin after the game. "Washington was the only team on our regular schedule that compares with them in strength." Not that Navy didn't try. Kennedy barely had time to shuck his coat in the hot, humid bowl when Navy end Greg Mather picked off a Mis souri lateral and skipped 95 yards to put the Navy out front 6-0 in the firsi quarter. 0 Mather's run set a record ilr the classic. ,, That was Navy's finest me ment. It faded in the same quarter when Tiger halfback Norm Beal grabbed a Navy" pass and raced 90 yards to score. i. THERE'S AN EASIER WAY TO GET EXTRA H nl SEE COMMERCIAL CREDIT PLAN Why 'Uo it the hard way? Call on the Commercial Credit Plan whenever you can use extra cash. (Our loan service is fast, friendly and Convenient. Rates are reasonable. That's why thdsanS of families prefer to us Commercial Credit TiaB It's t!i pay way that fits yo.;T ;.y tiny! fcojj, (Sis r;J C5 a roi;,ii:-'.;"r to p'.xx. ov visit u:. HOn'MUCIvCDYGJMEEO? CflS dill 1 itWi Payment! 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