Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 19, 1948, Page 8, Image 8

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    r
PACE EIGHT
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
MONDAY, JAN. 17, 19-18
Vebfoots In
Front By Win
Over Orange
Roger Wiley Fires
19 Points As Ducks
Bypass OSC, 42-41
STANDINGS
W.
1
Pel.
.t'.t7
.tiOli
.flH)
..MKI
.'JSO
Orepon
Orrcrm Stale
Washing Ion
Idaho
Washington Slate
3
2
1
1
SEATTLE. Jan. 1!)
rntly having ndnptrd
l.-V. -
Appur-
you can
have II, It s too much lor me" up- i
proach to I he conference lead,
northern division Coast eonlereiu-e :
basketball fives swine into ttie third
week of play with four of the five
division entries having a crack at :
the No. 1 spot.
Only Washington State has stayed .
out of the pace-setting post and the ;
Cougars, bolstered by a split against t
Washington, tackle Idaho's Van
dals In a nome-and-home duo this j
week-end. A sweep would put Jack !
Frlel's strong defensive squad In a
challenging spot. !
BKAVERS DKPOSKI)
Oregon currently occupies the ;
front-running ranking after du-pos- ;
ing of Oregon State's erstwhile :
leaders Saturday night The Ducks I
swing north Friday lor an early .
conclusion of their season's four ,
games with the Washington Hus
kies. The two clubs split a pair
during the Huskies' southern jaunt.
In the week-end's concluding
contests, Washington hit a hot clos
ing pace to crush Washington State !
Oregon State 42-41 after trying to
stall for five minutes on a 41-35
margin.
Traditionally hot. the OSC-Ore-gon
clash was marked by a brief
flurry of protest when the gun went
off 13 seconds prematurely. But a
resumption of play failed to change
the count. Oregon's big center.
Roger Wiley, paced the scoring
with 19 points as his teammates
held Cliff Crandall. OSC siege gun.
to but seven only one from the
floor.
NONE STAND Ol T
No Individual effort was Wash
ington's comeback against the Cou
gars. A surprise winner Friday i
night, WSC was hard pressed to
stay within range of a snarling
Husky after the first five minutes
and never approached closer than
10 points after a Washington flurry
opened the second half. Bill Van
j denburg hit 12 points, the Husky
J high, but was followed closely by
, Jack Nichols, Sammy White and
Bill Taylor each with 11. None of
, the Cougars hit double figures,
Vince Hanson's nine taking top
honors..
Rockets Bid
For Pacific
Hockey Lead
By The Associated Press
Tacoma s rough and ready
Rockets belatedly are contesting the
winning monopoly long held by the
Seattle Ironmen in the northern di
vision of the Pacific Ice Hockey
league.
Although the Rockets still are
eight points behind Seattle, they've
been gaining and last night won
their third victory over the Iron
men. The score was 6-3.
It was the fourth loss in six starts
for Seattle. Those four are more
than one-third of all the games the
Ironmen have lost this season.
Tacoma made quick work of gain
ing the upper hand, countering
after Seattle's opening goal with
three in a row and outscoring the
Ironmen the rest of the way.
Oakland's Oaks defeated the
Portland Eagles 5-2 in a battle
between the cellar occupants of the
aoumern ana noruiern division. It i
was the 15th defeat in 16 games for I
Portland.
Late Cage
Scores
High School
La Grande 31, Milton Frecwater
29.
Klamath Falls 47, Medford 28.
Redmond 36. Lakeview 24.
The Dalles 40, Hood River 37.
West Linn 51, Hillsboro 42.
Astoria 35, Salem 28.
Corvallls 32, Newport 30.
Grants Pass 66, Ashland 34.
Collegiate
Oregon 42, Oregon State 41.
Washington 61. WSC 35.
Puget Sound 65, Pacific U. 37.
College of Idaho 72, Willamette 49.
For Rent
TRUCKS PICKUPS - CARS
U-Drive - Move Yourself
Local or Long Distance, Save i
STILES' BEACON SERVICE
Phone 8304 1201 East Main
You're
JAM
. 1
Every Tuesday Nite
AT
EL RANCHO
TULE
UNDER NKW MANAGEMENT
jack Lucas your
FINE CHICKEN AND
DINNERS
Baseball, Inc.
Officers Meet
Tuesday Night
The nllieeiN ami directors ol
Klamaih Hascball Inc. will hold a
meeting Tuesday nicht at 8 o'clock
in the ofticc of the Palmerton Lum
ber company on Pine street to hear
reports on work going toward gel
tine i ont ruction started on a base
ball field and grandstand.
Plans for a baseball field are to
be sulmiitirtl to an a.vhnoct lor
drawing and to contractors for bid.
and a Ocal is virtually completed tor
a location otf s. tith in an area
which is rapidly being improved.
Also to lie reported on tomorrow
liiKht are plans for a baseball din
ner ami hot-su.ve session to be held
Wednesday, January 28, at which
Hill lirveils. possibly Cookie l.ava
gcuo. Joe Orcnco, Ken Pcnnrr, Wal
ter .The Great' Mails and other
notables of the diamond will attend.
Meetings of the directors of the i
baseball organinition are not closed.
bin are oen to all stockholders of
Klamath Baseball Inc. and anyone ;
interested in tin nrganutation.
Harrison
Victor In
Richmond
t RICHMOND. Calif . Jan. 19 i.-p
Leading money winners for three
tournaments of the winter golf cir
cuit (Los Angeles, Bing Crosby and
Richmond':
$4;,u -""- "s Angetes.
Ben Hogan. Hershey. Pa.. $4000.
E. J. i Dutch' Harrison. Little
Rock,
Bobby Locke, Johannesburg.
South Africa. S2195.50.
Jimmy Demaret. Oajai. Calif.,
S1847.33.
Stan Leonard, Vancouver. B. C,
$1817.50.
Dutch Harrison, playing out of
Little Rock. Ark., carded a one-under-par
71 on his final round to
win tiie Richmond Ojien golf tourn
ament Sunday with a 72-hole total
of 273.
Tiie self-styled Arkansas Traveler,
one of tiie top ten golfers in the
country, shot sub-par throughout
the tourney to bag the $2000 first
prize. He led after every round
with 65-67-70-71 cards.
A crowd of more than 7500 links
fans, gallerying the matches in
warm, sunny weather, watched the
big man from the Ozarks drop a
two-foot putt for a birdy 4 on the
last hole to take top money in the
S10.000 tourney.
Lesnevich
Called Top
Pro Athlete
By The Associated Press
Newark Gus Lesnevich. world
light-heavyweight boxing champion,
was named New Jersey's outstand
ing pro athlete of 1947 by Newark
Athletic club.
Washington Johnny Lujack of
Notre Dame was presented Wash
ington Touchdown club's Walter
Camp Memorial trophy as out
standing college football plaver of
1947. Charles Bcdnarik. Pennsyl
vania, received Knute Rockne Me
morial trophy as year's outstanding
lineman. Sammy Baush, Washing
ton Redskins back, received Robert
B Smith Memorial trophy as being
outstanding pro gridder. Jim
Tatum. Maryland, received club
nwniu as uuLsiniiuiiiK coiiege coacn j
aim jim ionzeunan oi cnicago
Cardinals was honored as leading
pro coach.
T.V ii 7 . , , ' yrRla i
lie Cc!:erly. Mississippi's record-
breaking passer, were named to re-
ceive Atlanta Touchdown club's an- i
I nual nlayer awards.
Pluladelnhia Joe Fulks. high
scoring Philadelphia pro basketball !
player, was selected by Philadelphia !
Writers association as out-!
n.n .i,i. . ,. .. .. . '
ing Johnn luiack Not Dame
All-America halfhaelr- T,l, ir.n,,
Jr.. Philadelphia sculler: Steve Van
Buren. Philadelphia nro back and
Ted Williams,
slugger.
Boston Red Sox
All-Tims Keg
Marks Put Up
' SALEM, Jan. 19 l,V Two new all-
time records were set Sunday in the
Oregon state bowling tournament,
which ends next, week-end.
Morley Madden, Bend, knocked
over 677 pins for a new high mark
ill the class C, sinclpK u-hiln )lm
! Portland team of Tony Larson and
; Al Lamb registered a 1232 for a new
class B double mark.
D. still. Roseburg. went into the
lead In the class B singles with 619.
while Charlie Booth and Harry
Bray, Klamath Falls class A doubles
team, took over first place In- their
; division with 1201.
Invited to a Big
SESSION
host
STEAK J
J
iff
Pelicans Pad
Lead, Routing
Medford 47-28
Cavemen Help Our
By Polishing Off
Ashland Grizzlies
Standings
W. I- Pet.
0 1000
3 2 .MO
3 1 .500
0 4 .000
Klamath Falls
Grants Pass
! Ashland
j Medtoid
IJi.Mrlel 4 basketball games of
Saturday night saw the Klamath
Kalis Pelicans Installed even more
solidly in the Southern Oregon high
school conference saddle at four
wins and no losses two full games
ahead of Grants Pass and Ashland
and with Medford virtually out of
; ,ne running.
Klamath drubbed the Black Tor-
nado for the second straight night,
1 47-28. while at Grunts Pass the
I Cavemen were measuring Ashland
' for the second time. 56 to 34.
j Each team will have played 12
conference games before the season
! is over, so with four In the basket
: the Pels' lead one-third of the way
; through is nothing to be taken
j lightly. All that is riding on the
; outcome of district 4 play is the
conference' championship and a
i berth in the state high school bus-
ketball tournament.
SAME AS BEFORE
Saturday nights Pelican court
game was a virtual wax reproduc
tion of the one Friday night, which
Uie Pels won by a score of 45-25
after an exciting first half.
Here again the first half was a
thriller, with Bob Fasel putting
Medford into the clear on two bas
kets right at the stun of the game.
The score mounted spraddle-fashlon
one team counting, then the other,
to 9-8 for the Black Tornado at Uie
end of the opening quarter.
Don Zarosinski pushed in a
bucket and added a free throw to
give Klamath a 11-9 margin early
m the second period, and little
Curt Richmond, pint-sized car
buretor of the Medford club, count
ed on a one-hander to the score.
Zarosinski came to the rescue
again with another push from the
right side of Uie hoop and Klamath
was ahead 13-11. The Pelicans were
never in arrears again. Halftime
count was 16-12.
The third quarter was an un
eventful one, ending w ith Klamath
in the lead by 22-17. and the steam
was really turned on in the fourth.
One big period seems to be the
Pelican style of play this season,
and Saturday night it was the last
quarter 25 points, more than
! Kiamath had scored in the three
previous stanzas.
EXACTLY EQUALLED
With less than a minute to play
the Pels had equalled Friday night's
45-25 score exactly and It looked as
if they might let it rest there. But
George Goodman earned a free
throw to break the pattern.
Gary Dawes gave the Pels back
their 20-point lead, but Herb
Brower again spoiled Uie plan with
a last-second ringer which ended
the game at 47-28.
Dawes was the leading scorer of
that till at 12 points, the only play
er to get into Uie double figure
bracket. Jack Lust, Zarosinski and
Bob Barnes split second honors with
nine each. Medford 5 Bob Fasel
was high for the Tornado at seven.
A crowd only slightly less than
that of the previous night saw Sat
urday's tilt.
Lineups and scoring:
Klamath (47) Pos. 1281 Medford
Barnes i9 F (6) Brower
Dawes (12) .. F i7i Fasel
Lust i9i C i5i Mottern
Kennett (5)
G .... (6) Richmond
Zarosinski 9i G ... (4) Goodman
Klamath reserves Dorman 3,
Whitney, Edwards and Strlngham.
Medford reserves-Morris, Arnold,
Irvin, Niedermeir.
Antlers Capture
x w
TITS LOOP Will
dwi v-,. t. i tu. ..... ,
D 'u,.J ... "i,T'u
01 Bonanza nign got tneir first
b? ! lHf
"ujr, wupiim .oiy lo n.
I Bly has lost three games without a
win In the small school circuit.
Dennis. Davis, ace of the Antler
quintet, did half of the Bonanza
scoring 22 points. Bly held its own
for an 18-18 tie at halftime. The
preliminary game went to the Bo
nanza "B" string, 31-21, with Bob
Barney scoring 13 points.
wmm
Nou-ulll iou im kak Hit Pepsi Trtatmt Top'
VM torrowed from mt. A. J.I"
Look for hidden design under the eork in
every Pepsi-Cola boltle lop.
EnlerPepi,sgreslJ203,725'TresureTop"
Sweepstakes and Contests.
Every entry gels a Treasure Certificate for
i25e,&FcT.nrSW"P',"l," Pri"'
".)un H P ,0P, 0ET WTHV BLANKS
AT YOUR STORt
Vcpni-Cuh Company, lMng Inland Cily, N. Y.
t'ranchiscd Bottlen Klamalb Falls Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co.
Just Around
nn
. I B -1 Wu.S
Ignoring a snimplow. a Chicago electrician eherki a sign announcing
the ticket sale for the Chicago Cubs' opening game with the St. Louis
Cardinals at Wrlgley Field. Date of the game is April 23.
East Has Monopoly
On Unbeaten Teams
NEW YORK. Jan. 19 i"t The
college basketball spotlight focused
on sectional races today as the cam
paign moved into the backstretch
with the Kast boasting a complete
monopoly on the dwindling list of
unbeaten powers.
Six major teams have been able
to come through the first half's
skirmishing without mishap but
odds are heavy against any one of
them going the rest of the way un
scathed. Portland May
Have Lengthy
String Ready
By the Associated Prrss
Belliugham and Seattle continued
to pace the Pacific coast pro cage
race today, three and one-half and
four games ahead of Tacoma and
Vancouver, respectively, but a sign
of life at tbe bottom of the league
gives indications the second half
rare may not be so rosy.
The lowly Portland Indians who
have won but six of 27 starts are I
working on their longest string of
the year after having dumped As- !
toria 65-52 Saturday night. It was '
the defending titllsts' second win
in a row.
Seattle got back into the race :
yesterday with a 61-60 win over i
Vancouver, then dropped over to j
Tacoma to down the Mountaineers '
51-45 in an exhibition go.
Seattle's player-coach Al Bright- !
man led the Vancouver win with J
21 points, five more than tallied by
Norm Baker, the No. 1 champion j
scorer.
All teams are idle tonight.
Trojans Bop
Visiting Five
Sacred Heart's unpredictable Tro
jans landed on the visiting Gilchrist
Grizzlies with both feet Saturday
night to hand the Gilchrist boys one
of their very few basketball lickings
of this current season. The score
was 38-31 on the Altamont floor.
Gilchrist leads the county 'B'
school loop with three wins and no
ritt. , !..., ., . oi
. ...h. -...u ..... .
Heart Is right behind with two and
one. Saturday's encounter w-as a
trial run. testing the track for a
conference clash between the Tro
jans and the Grizzlies Friday, Feb
ruary 13.
That game will be played at Gil
christ, and the Grizzlies are ex
tremely powerful on their own
floor.
Sacred Heart also won the pre-
I liminary game, 28-22.
trt -
r,
The Corner
in
Kl,. ..I.., ....k....
.vw .UUK . ..... ,.- inmreiy without thought of the con
cludes Duquesne .lS-0. New ork i ,eqUe.s lo the great Columbia I
university .11-0.. Columbia itl-o.. ,,, iUih'-. ,T"Z
p?8","', i0'. ,h',d?,' 'J,1-0,'' " hu ".xlti'tiy has an , ,'. i
Rhode Island State 8-0- and Ford- lllm, r,mill(, ,.,,. u( im0l0 000 i
ham (9-0. ! ,,., m,1My MlM.kx (1, kHlm,n ;
Of these, Rhode Island Stale and ; have been exterminated nod if in,..., I
LaSallc face the most danger during
Uie coming week.
Rhode Island takes on three foes
Holy Cross. Urow-n and the Coast
Guard. LaSalle meets a Temple
team that has won seven and lost
four in one of the weeks top en
counters Saturday.
NYU tackles Colgate In Madison
I Square Garden Tuesday night while
Fordham has a couple of games on
card the Coast Guard Wednesday
and Su Peter's Saturday.
The Big Nine saw Its title chase
thrown into a wide open scramule
Saturday when Michigan handed
Wisconsin Its first league setback.
43-39. Wisconsin still sets the pace
with four wins in five starts but
Iowa, Michigan and Purdue, each
with only one defeat, are close
enough to move Into the top spot
on a moment's notice.
In the mountain states or Sky
line Six. as the league Is now known
Brigham Young i'2-0i and Wyo
ming 1 1-0) own clean slates. But
defending champ Wyoming has the
best season's record with 11 wins
and three setbucks.
Hot Rodders
Ordered Off
Plane Strip
i AURORA, Jan. 18 .?) Tile "hot
i rod'' boys who have been turning
! the war-built emergency airfield
i into a racing oval for their hopped
I up-stripped dow n Jobs each week
i end were ordered away Sunday by
state police officers.
Whether there were orders Issued,
or whether the boys with an esti
mated 75 to 100 cars on hand lor
the runs Just scattered, would be
a question.
CAA InspecT M. P. Ruggcnberg
said he asked p.'l'j to Intervene
after personally checking complaints
from pilots that they couldn't land
on the emergency strip. While offi
ce - were debating under what law
to Issue citation. If any. the boys
were gone in a roaring of motors
and clouds of exhaust and dust.
Cummings'
Taxidermy Studio
Game Headi
Tanning
Birds Rugs
Ph. 3658 249 E. Main
SSI
Giant Outlay
For Fisheries
Being Talked
Lower Columbia
Salmon Decline
Told In Congress
WASHINGTON. Jim. IB iV Hep
Tollefson lU-Wush.i asked the house
appropriations subcommittee on war
department civil functions today to
approve $1.41)0.000 for leluibllliiillnii
of fisheries In the lower Columbia
river.
The army engineers Included that
amount In a rivers unit harbors pro
gram to a I il In the program luiiuu
urnlrd by the fishing Industry and
the slules of Washington mid Ore
gon. "It Is estimated qutle accurately."
Tollefson Mild In a statement tiled
wnh the subcommittee. "Hun recla-
matlon and power projects on the
Columbia liver have destroyed filtyi
per rent of the Columbia river Mil- I
mon fisheries. I
111(111 VEAItl.Y LOSS
"The annua! dollar loss to ciim
merclal and sports fisheries is esti
mated at S15.000.000 11 Is admitted
that the federal proKiiim for dam
construction lor purposes of power.
i etc.. must progress consistent Iv with
public nerd.
I "But among others the problem of
I maintenance of fisheries must be
given adequate and well balanced
consideration."
! Tollefson said that when the first
dams were built on the river loo
little consideration was given to pro
tection of migrating fish. Hume
structures, he continued, completely
blocked the passage of migratory
full and wicd out races completely
iiumirrcis oi
miles ,r lit,. 1....,
feeding and spawning grounds In the
: VusL f'nlnmlioi twi..,. ...... . i ,
. T . eu
remaining are not carefully managed !
lano. increased the already diou.
nlshed crop will become smaller nnd
smaller and the entire Industry will
be lost.'-
ftl.KKADY HAITI M l)
He mild the same Hung had hup-
pened to the Atlantic salmon.
The representative said Washing-
ton and Oregon are In accord on a
general plan to rehabilitate the sal
mon runs of the river. He said thr
progrum calls for water resources
surveys, engineering und biological
surveys, stream Improvement and
hatchery construction. He said the
program would be under the direc
tion of the fish and wildlife service
of the Ulterior department
Oakland Hockey
Players Moved
OAKLAND, Cullf . Jun. 10 .A;
Two Oakland Pacific Coast Ice
Hockey league players were headed
lo new clubs today.
The Oaks announced Al Picard
was en route to Vancouver where
hell be alternate goultrndrr with
the Canucks, anil Winginuu Pat
Bouchard was slated for the Sail
Diego Skyhawks In the first half of
a player swap between the Oaks
and San Diego.
Pep Goes Back
To Boston Ring
BOSTON, Jan. IB i,Vi Alter a
two - year absence. Featherweight
Champion Willie Pep of Hartford.
Conn., will return to the Boston
Garden ring tonight to engage
Lightweight Joey Angelo of Provi
dence, R. I., In a non-title lo-round
boxing bout.
Angelo. a clever lei former, scored
an uiwct win over Bob Montgomery,
former lightweight tltllst, here last
month. Pep already has a victory
over Angelo.
r;i:oic.i:s
( iiliinrl SIiop
BUILT-INS SCREENS
STORE FIXTURES
Distributed by Martin's
w m mum i k
ir r iii ... r
BlITI-WIINHAIS COMPANY
Wrestling Cards On
Armory Mat Revived
Afler being Idle lor about a iiionlh, new life will he pumped Into Ilia
tallered ennuis at the iiiinory lhl coining Friday nluiit when the men nt
muscle come back to reinstate wrestling as a weekly feature of tht
local spoils calendar.
I'lomoler Muck l.llliud shut down llho iiiiiiniy bonis Just befon
Christinas mi he could lake a vacation mid sen what was going on In his
01 1 1 in of endeavor elsewhere, but now
Is ready to start up In business again.
Briefs
Cal Bears
Stiil Top
ivision
,OM ANtli:i,i:.S, Jun. Ill i1' -Cull-
lornla s Golden Hems continued lo"""1 consistently good performers of
' ' "" " ZXZtXZ. n" nrw
division of i he Pacific Coast basket- T, ,,., juini.iiui .1 l v,,m
bull coiileieuce as the loop prepares
for Its third week of aclloii.
The Hears gained their third mid
fourth victories In as many sturls
by dumping Hlaufoid In a pair Fri
day and riatiiiday. Capt. Andy Wolfe
got hot In the lust five minutes to
down 1 1 lo stubborn Indians. 40-34.
Friday at Palo Alto. Leading scorer
Chin k Hunger uguin showed the
! way for Cul the following evening
j by contributing 15 points to the
I Hems' 50-40 verdict over Ktallford
i llerkeley.
While the Indians weie being
; pushed deeper Into tl liar where
! their record shows four straight
I losses, Mi'iilhrrn California and
UCLA spin their week-end series
here to remain knotted for second
place each with two wins and two
deleat.H.
I Injuries Fatal
I "
em,.,,:,, ...
t'llll'AtlO. Jan. Ill i,l , James
llrnrlkscn. 31, of lau t'hllre. Wis.,
mrnhrr of Die Itl.lcl l". S. Olympic
ski team, died early today In a
Chicago hospital nf Injuries ul
f.rrd while rompelliii In (he
Norge Ski eluh's 4.'inl annual
Jumping liiuriiamrnl yrtrrilu v.
Ilrnrlkvn fell In making his
second leap of 17!l feel In the
rl.ss division, lie suffered a
errehral hemorrhage and was
laken lo the lioillal lillriinsrlulls.
RnnA OnJfn Rumnu
; 000 V"' DUmpy
CHICAGO. Jan. I!) i V.Wlsron-.ill
held the nig Nine bu-kcthul! lead
today ullhough suf feting lis llrst
conference detent, but the road the
Badgers hope will lead to their sec
ond successive championship now
bus become quite bumpy.
Proving almost invincible on its
home floor at Madison. Wisconsin
cruised over Illinois. Minnesota nil..
Iowa theie uiul brut Indiana in Its
only road game thus fur. But the
home court record was suapiied Snt
urduy night as Michigan grubbed
a 43-311 victory to end the llndgers'
fast start of four straight triumph.
Your claims arc paid wllh a smile.
Hans Norland Icsuranre. N.
Hill St. I'hnne liOUO.
Introducing
The Fomour
JUSTIN
COWBOY
BOOTS!
Heavy tup. Itlurk
work Hi vim.
23.50
THE
GUN STORF:
Seldom equalled, never excelled
Wholesale Distributors
lie iiutiiiuiicrd this morning lie
would stint olf wllh a triple main
event, three flve-imiiiil lop billing
setups, and throw In a "ladles' night"
to hoot. Much regular duciit bouulit
warrants a free one. provided the
user of the second pasteboard Is the
wile or girl-fi lend.
l.llliud said thill before Uie war
ladles' nliihls were extremely piipu
lar shindigs for piilrnns of the
wrestling rinds,
'II in piogiaiii for Friday night is
made up of bonis bclween regular
! men ing Huilor Al Williums: Buck
I Weaver taking on 'l ex lluiinr, and
Hob Cuiiiinlugs, the Florida flush,
coming to grips wllh the popular
Canudtiiu, Fruuklc Hurl.
INDIANS I'l AVI I) IT
The giimo of badinlulon. then
known as "poonu." was played in
India centuries before II became
known to the K.ngllMi In IH'fj. I
NOT' DANGI IIOI S
Nothing would happen If a comet's
tall brushed the eitrlh. This hna
orcorrrd uiiiiienius times, and each
time gases of the tall failed to pene
trate our almosphero.
Ajr Mrcury
tro!nd mtchonki know yit
how a job thould bt don ...
our modern qulpmvnt iavi
you Hm end mooty.
vry joblarg
or imall your lotlifaclion
comt flrtt. Every ont of ui
It truly lnlrildin aiwrlng
your driving ploture. Thal'i
why ptopl ar toying Mr
cury Ssrvlc Il mftrtiftd irv
let It'i tomathlng difTartntt
LOW PRICES NO WAITINQ
Inman Motor Co.
424 Ho. 6th
7 YOU i
) ALWAYS
GET (
More
) WITH i
SERVICE!)
I I'1
7T