Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 23, 1961, Page 9, Image 9

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    , '
ins with the big Buckeye All-1 Dischinger,
Ore-Tech (agers,
Raiders Play Again
Oregon Collegiate Conference
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
W L Pd,
Portland Slat
Eastern Oregon
Southern Oregon
Oregon Ted;
Oregon College
Saturday
4 1 .800
4 i .667
4 3 .571
2 3 .400
0 5 .000
results: Port
land' State 51. Southern Oregon
41; Eastern Oregon 63, Oregon
College 55. . . .
Portland State retained first
place, in the Oregon Collegiate
Conference basketball race by
completing a sweep of a week
end series with a 51-41 victory
oyer Southern Oregon Saturday
night.
Entering the series Southern
Oregon had topped the league,
bastern Oregon Is only one
half game behind Portland State
after two victories over Oregon
College, which still is looking tor
its first victory this season. The
Saturday score was 63-55.
A busy schedule this week has
Alaska at Eastern Oregon for
non-conference games tonight and
Tuesday. Also in action Tuesday
will be OCE at Portland State
and Oregon Tech at Southern
Oregon. Next weekend Portland
State will be at Eastern Oregon
for a pair of games and OCE will
be at Oregon Tech for another
pair.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The folks in the midlands who
say Terry Dischinger is as good
as Olympic teammate Jerry Lucas
and that Ohio State is far from
invincible get a chance to test
their theory this week as college
basketball begins to bust out of
its mid-term doldrums.
Dischinger, probably destined to
spend his college career in Lucas
shadow, has a head-to-head meet-
PCL Prexy Seeking
Big Baseball Switch
SEATTLE (UPI) Dewey So
riano, a fellow who once was a
Ditcher, general manager, presi
dent and chief ticket taker for the
Yakima Bears, thinks baseball can
Stand some changes.
And he's got one.
Now president of. the Pacific
Coast League, Soriano wants to let
the pitchers stick to pitching and
allow a manager to name a play
er to do the stickwork for the
hurler.
' The plan would be optional and
If a manager happened to be
blessed with a good-hitting hurler,
he merely lets the pitcher bat for
himself.
Soriano tossed his bomb into a
special meeting of the coast
league here Saturday and already
it has accomplished one of its
purposes it has fans talking base
ball for a change.
An ex-pitcher and so-so hitter
himself, Soriano believes the in-
Detroit, Nats
Get Nowhere
In Pro Race
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Eastern Division
W L Pel. GB
Boston 33 15 .688
Philadelphia ... 30 17 .638 2"i
Svracuse 22 24 .478 10
New York .... 15 33 .313 18
Western Division
W L Pet. GB
St. Louis 30 17 .638
Detroit 22 26 .458 SVi
Cincinnati 23 31 .426 10'i
Los Angeles ... 19 31 .30 12V4
Sunday Results
' Syracuse 112." Los Angeles. 109 '
Cincinnati 115, St. .Louis 108
Detroit 116, Philadelphia 128
novation would also help speed up
the game.
Three Awkward Swings
Quite often a guy who is
picture of grace on the mound
just walks up to the plate, takes
three awkward swings and sits
down," says Soriano. "I don't be
lieve it will make the pitcher's job
any tougher physically. And they
are getting paid to pitch to good
hitters
"Under this plan, a good pitcher
could stay in the game longer
and we would wind up with more
complete games by hurlers. It
wouldn't mean the end of relief
pitchers out now a manager could
keep a topline starter in the late
innings when under today's rules
he would be forced to replace
him." . ; i .
Soriano kicked his idea around
for several weeks before bringing
it to the attention of the direc
tors.
Kiner Backs Idea
Ralph Kiner. the former Pitts
burgh power hitter, says he thinks
the idea is an excellent one as
does Frank Lane,, the new gener.
al' manager at Kansas City.
1 Baseball, Soriano believes, needs
to get out and fight for its share
of the sports dollar and that the
game can be speeded up,
"Football and basketball have
done it," he says. VThe last thing
baseball did was bring in the
gloves off the field."
Whether Soriano's idea catches
on is up to the baseball rules com
mittee which is chairmanned by
Jim Gallagher of the Philadelphia
PhUlies.
Soriano is quite willing for his
'Xzv c
I fV 4 J
America on Saturday afternoon! the conference scoring race last
when Purdiie and top-ranked Ohio year and outscored him in their
State collide at Columbus, Ohio, meetings as sophomores, gets
for the Big Ten lead. I only this one chance against the
The 6-6 Dischinger, shrugging! Bucks.
off a badly cut finger suffered in If it's a show-down Coach Ray
a chemistry lab accident, scored Eddy has In mind, he may find
19 points as Purdue (9-3) bounced
I W W
who beat Lucas In down is the feature game on a
big program Saturday as basket
ball swings back into full-time
activity.
The schedule dribbles along the
first four days this week, with
only a dozen major games, be
ore opening up a bit on Friday.
fourlh-rankrd Iowa off a 10-game
winning streak and out of the Big
Ten lead with a 47-41 thumping
last Saturday night. Talented Ter
Ohio Stale less inclined to control; Most of the power teams will be
weekend
Minnesota Coach John Kundla
tried it against Ohio State and it
ry is expected to be fully recov-, befuddled the Bucks only for 5
than the Hawkeyes were over the;back in action either Friday, Sat
in-day or a week from tonight,
after completing mid-term exam
inations
It'll likely be a vastly shuffled
top 10 in the AP poll by the time
they return. Although Ohio State,
second-ranked St. Bonaventure,
and sixth-ranked North Carolina
ered by the time the Boilermakers minutes. Behind 8-1 at the time,
get at the Brckeyes, their top na- the defending NCAA champions
tional ranking, and their nation-switched into an aggressive, ball
leading 18 p;ime winning streak, hawking defense, reeled off eight
Purdue first has a conference, straight points and went on to a went unbeaten through last week,
test at much-beaten Northwestern 75-56 victory with Lucas scoringiand three others Bradley, Duke
tonight, but this one doesn t figure 22 points and his starting mates and St. John's were idle, the top
to be much more than a warm-up all hitting in double figures. 1 10 combined had only a (-5 won
for the big Saturday game. The Purdue-Ohio State show-host record. '
www
Iowa, before losing to Purdue.
had defeated Illinois. Fifth-ranked
Louisville split a pair during the
week losing to Xavier of Ohio
84-77 before bouncing back to top
ple Dayton 63-50 in the national
TV game Saturday. Seventh-
ranked DePaul, unbeaten a week
ago, lost twice to Notre Dame
and Western Michigan. Tenth
ranked Kansas State also lost its
only start to Kansas.
WAYNE SCOn. Sports Editor
HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls, Oregon
Monday, January 23, 1M1
PAGE
TERRY DISCHINGER
-. ... ignores injury
, The two hottest clubs in the Na
tional Basketball Association to
day are the Detroit Pistons and
the Syracuse Nationals but both
re rushing along on a treadmill.
Each has won five games in a
row, yet the Pistons remain 84
names behind the St. Louis Hawks
in the Western Division and the
Nats still are third in the Eastern
Division, 10 games back of the
first place Boston. Celtics and 7'4
behind the Philadelphia Warriors.
The Pistons cut down thd War
riors, 136-12,:. Sunday and the Nats By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Wildlife
Backers
Ask Ban
CORVALLIS (AP) - The Ore
gon Wildlife Federation will ask
the state legislature to bar con
struction of dams that would
damage fish runs on any coastal
streams south of the Columbia
River. .
The Trask, Nehalem, Rogue
and Illinois rivers were named in
a weekend resolution as streams
on which power dams have been
proposed.
The resolution, passed at the
annual' convention, said any dams
should be constructed so far up
stream that spawning areas will
not be affected. .
The. federation asked the state
Game Commission to stock Dex
ter Reservoir with warm water
game fish.
More severe penalties were
asked for hunting accidents in
which a person is shot.
The federation also proposed a
mid-summer commercial fishing
closure on the Columbia River to
allow more steelhead to get up to
spawning grounds.
Delegates were told steelhead
aor.ano is qu.ie wi. uig or n.5;nave dec,ined jh , ,
league to experiment with the ,umbja Basil, ta t i'
rule and the board of directors
agree all the way.
Pitchers, as everyone knows,
aren't supposed to be able to hit
anyway. ,
If Soriano gets his way, they
won't have to unless they're good.
Like, for example, a pitcher by
the name Babe Ruth.
Linfield Nips
Pacific 70-66,
CI Defeaied
turned back the Los Angeles Lak
vers, 112-1W. In the other game,
the Cincinnati Royals downed the
Hawks, 115-108. ,
Gene Shue had 32 points for the
Pistons and Bailey Howell chipped
in with 31. Just as important in
the triumph was the fact that the
Pistons held Wilt Chamberlain to
28 points.
The triumph
Linfield took over the undis
puted lead in the Northwest Con-!
ference, basketball race by down
ing Pacific. 70-66, while College of
Idaho was losing. 80-77, to Whitman.
Pacific's Gary Moye, the high
scorer with 22 points, sparked a
second half rally that all but
wiped out a 38-33 Linfield half-
was the Pistons time lead. The margin was cut to
Seventh in their last eight starts.
The Nats trailed the Lakers for
three periods and couldn't pull
into a tie at 8-all until midway in
the fourth period. The lead see
sawed back and fourth until the
Lakers went ahead, 109-108 with
less than a minute to go.
But then Dick Barnett went to
work and plunked in two baskets
for the Nats before time ran out.
The triumph was the Nats seventh
In their last eight games.
The Royals proved finally that
they can win without Oscar Rob
ertson. Until Sunday they hadn't
won a game all season without
the Big O.
Wayne Embry and Jack Twy-j
man supplied most of the Royals
punch in their fast finish in the
rationally televised game. Embry
finished with 28 points and 18 re
bounds, whi'e Twyman dropped in
14 points in the final quarter.
past
years.
J. T. Barnaby of the U. S. Fish
and Wildlife Service said that of
the 383,000 spring and summer
run of 195!), only 7 per cent or
24,000 fish were left for' spawn
ing. -
Responsible for this decline, he
said, is commercial ' and sports
fishing, dam construction, water
pollution, water diversion and
watershed deterioration
ft rTimW
0 antc
Bob Rosburg Wins
Crosby Links Loot
PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (API
Bob Rosburg's long experience
w ith the Pebble Beach course plus
a great pressure putt on the final
hole brought him the $5,300 first-
rot only $1,625 for a tie for fourth.
His 75 gave him a 284.
Deadlocked for second, one
stroke olf the pace at 283. were
Roberto de Victnzo of Mexico
City and Dave Ragan of Orlando.
prize cheek in Bing Crosby's 20lliFla. De Vicenzo shot a 75 final
JERRY LUCAS
. . , (aces threat
HOW TO HANDLE HUSKIES Sacred Heart coach Marv Delplanche, kneeling, ex-
?lains the shortest most direct route to win over the Merrill Huskies to hit starting
rojans. From left they are, Mike Holland, Keith Murray, Mike Slowey, Elmo LeBeau
and Jerry DeNault. The Trojans and the Huskies tangle tomorrow night on the Mer
rill floor in a County B League hassle. ' '-
67-66 with 27 seconds left but
Pacific fou!s in desperate efforts
to get the ball resulted in Linfield
free throws that built up the final
margin.
It took Whitman two overtime
periods to beat College of Idaho,
which had gone into the game
tied for first with Linfield
Mike Monahan's only four.
points, scored in the second over
time, were the deciders.
The high scorer was Bob
Moreno of the losers with 21
points. Doug Grant paced Whit
man with 17.
Only one game is scheduled
this week among Oregon schools.
Linfield wM be at Willamette
Saturday.
Oregon High School Basketball
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Medford 78, Grants Pass 47.
Roseburg 57, NoVth Eugene 55
Astoria 66, ' David Douglas
(Portland) 44
Marshfield 72, South Eugene 71
North Bend 68, Thurston
(Springfield) 58
Baker 59, Prineville 47
Redmond 47, Pendleton 40
Milton-Freewater 41, Vale 38
Seaside 77, Neahkahnie 56
Myrtle Creek 62, Glendale 60
Myrtle Point 71, Reedsport 68
Portland Christiab 66, Concordia
(Portland) 44
Wallowa 50, Imbler 48 (0 v e r-
time)
Union 52, Joseph 48
Enterprise 61, North Powder 59
Elgin 72, Lostine 62
Douglas (Dillard) 52, Riddle 49,iosses Slanr0rd
FIGHT SLATED TONIGHT
Webf oots1 Charley Warren
Hits 54 In Weekend Action
Ontario 68. Meridian, Idaho, 32
Klamath Falls 87, Ashland 34
Madras 76. Burns 46
Sutherlin 2?, Oakland 17 '
Weekend College Basketball
. , ( FAR WEST
Washington 51, Stanford 49
Oregon 67, Idaho 63
Oregon State 72, Washington
By United Press International
The "boss's daughter" is knock
ing them dead at Oregon.
Charlie Warren, son of John
Warren ' who once coached the
Ducks, whisked in 28 points Satur
day night while leading Oregon
to a 67-63 win over Idaho. This
output followed a Friday night
splurgu in which Charlie meshed
26 points during a fiO-53 verdict
at the expense of Washington
Slate.
in other Saturday action, well
scattered because of examination
periods, Washington defeated
Stanford, 51-49, in the only Big
Five (tame of the night; Oregon
State ran away from Washington
State, 72-47; Seattle trimmed
Montana State, 80-70; Portland
downed Alaska, 73-48 and Pepper-
dine defeated San Diego State.
59-48. .
Ed Corel! won the game for
Washington with a field goal in
the last three seconds of play. It
was the Huskies second win in
Big Five action against four
which tripped
Oregon State 'got off to an 18-5
lead over Washington State with
the aid of Jim Woodland whose
24 points were high for the night.
Terry Ball countered with 18 for
the losers. ; ;
Dave Mills and Eddie Miles
Lucky Lanes
ALLIV KATZ
a y
40"! 3',1
37' n't,
Bonanza Call
Swtn Lk
Wrlghti Rtally
Ounnt Hettlnf
Blclroi
unit swtdin
Amldont
Glasi Mountain
Oaant saehar
DtWIH l Blrk 3IV, SJVi
Lola Cart mi SJ'i
Chambari Moving 24 Sa
Jan. If rasultt: Oeant Sachar 4.
Dunna 0; Swan Laka 4, DaWItt a, Blrk
0; Balcaitroa 3. Chambari li Amldoni
3. Glait Mountain 1; Bonanza Cafa 3.
loii -ia ii Lima swaoen 3, Wrlgntl 3.
Washington in .overtime Friday
night, now has a 2-1 record and
a second place tie with UCLA.
Southern California, idle all last
week, heads the Big Five with a
4-0 mark IICI.A alcn u IHI.vFrant Food
along with California which is in scnum rirai
combined for 63 points to lead
Seattle to its 80-70 win over Mon
tana Stale and the Chieftains
tourth straight triumph.' Mills
scored 34 points andd Miles 29.
Portland's Pilots won their 11th
game of the season at the ex
pense of outmanncd Alaska, Mike
Doherly led tlie winners with 17
in a game played at Vancouver,
Pepperdine's win against San
Diego ' State was the second
straight in non-league action for
the Waves who trail the West
Coast Athletic Conference with a
0-3 showing.
Outside Activity
Terry Herman's jump shot two
seconds away from the final
buzzer gave Orange County an
80-78 nod over Cal Poly of San
!.nk Dhisnn.
Big Five and WCAC teams will
sec some outside activity this
week. Denver and the Air Force
Academy invade Los Angelee Frl
day and Saturday to take turns
playing Southern California and
UCLA. Washington meets Oregon
and Oregon Stale over the week-
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)-Harry
Campbell, lightweight from San. State 47
Utah 72, Montana 56
Air Force 70, Wyoming 59
Colorado State U. 60, New Mex-
Saturday. Detroit whipped Cin-'Jose State, faces Flory Olguin of
cinnati, 130-106: Syracuse turned Los Angeles tonight in a 10-round
fcack Boston. 127-124; St. Louisibout here. This marks the first
lipped New York. 145-122, and time Campbell, a quarter-finalist, ico 53
Philadelphia vanquished Los An-lin the Olympics last summer, will) Denver 74, Colorado State Col-
LADY IUO LIAOUI
Howards Clfa'nara
N.gnt Hawk
iwarkat Batkat -Brownt
Plumbinaj
i na Rancn
40' 3S'
40 ag
li 4?
37 4JH
n
the leapuc basement.
Nine Straight Points
Stanford moved ahead of lhe!0,rl.,
Huskies, 48-47, with two and a s"! on
. . . F'rlt Fadaral
nan minuics 10 piay aner scoring Jln. ,. mu,. ,,, 4 Drlvt
nine straight points. Then uint Z"" '
. .. ... .... iBrowna J, T I; Ranch 7. Howardt 1
.ames niL wun neiaer to puirant fom i, swat on uuu'
Washington on top but
High taam oama. Btlcaitrot hlah
gamg. Anna Baldwin m, nigh md, u- end while California opens four
cvaiyn srannan m. , . Hau,.l an nke. Salurriav
Stanford Is idle.
In the WCAC, the University of
San Francisco meets Cal Poly
(San Luis Obispo) Monday and
Gonzaga Saturday. Santa Clara
faces Utah and St. Mary's meets
Cal Poly Saturday while the Mus
tangs' Pomona campus takes on
Pepperdine. Nevada and Loyola
tangle Thursday.
Santa Barbara, leader el the
4 33
43' 4 M'.i
43 31
4 31
tnlin '" Markaf. Batkat I
JOIini Hah M-rlr-f ft-.hat mi.
Hendry's free throw tied it for the "'gn taam ann, mas ptaaitr !,
. .. hgh Ind. gama. Lafraynt Harrlt
uiuiaiia. n gn ms. aariaa, Lattayna Harrn Ml.
TV Tiff
Matches
Sluggers
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
It will be puncher against
puncher in the Saturday night
television fight matching middle
weights Rory Calhoun and Floren
tine Fernandez. , ,
They clash in a ten-rounder
ABC TV, 10 p.m., EST at New
York's Madison Square Garden.
The winner probably will earn
a berth in the 160-pound division's
top ten although neither is a rank
ing middleweight now. Fernan
dez, 24-year-old Cuban, is ranked
sixth smong the welterweights. Ip
his debut in the middleweight he
knocked out Phil Moyer in the
fifth round at the Garden last
Nov. 12.
Calhoun, of White Plains. N.Y.
once was a top-ranking middle
weight. The 26-year-old slugger In
dicated he was on the rise again
when he outpointed Hank Casey,
tourui-ranking middleweight, on
New Year's Day in New Orleans
Fernandez has a 28-2 record, in
eluding 22 knockouts. Calhoun's
record ii 4510-2, Including 21
Kayos.
Lightweight contender Kennv
ine ot Muskegon, Mich., meets
newcomer Joe Stable of Cuba in
the main ten-rounder at New
York's St. Nicholas arena tonicht.
Cuba, 24, a stablemate of wel
terweight champion Benny (Kid)
Paret, beat Chlco Vele in his U.S.
debut st 'the Garden last month.
He has a 12-M record, including
three kayos. Lane, 28, has a 62-9
record including 13 knockouts.
annual golf tournament
"I knew I had to make it,"
Rosburg uxid of the 14-foot slight
ly hooking putt he sank for a
birdie four on tile final hole Sun
day for an even-par 72 and a win
ning 282 for the 72 holes.
Still the ex-Stanford star who
won the PGA tournament In 1959
for his last major victory had to
wait a half hour to see if Bill
Collins wns guing to beat him
Collins, of Baltimore, needed
even par for the final two holes to
tie and a birdie on one to win,
"If Collins gets a par on that
17th, he deserves to win," Ros
burg commented as a stiff wind
from the ocean whipped the
course.
Collins went one-over-par on the
17th when his tee shot was trapped
on the 218-yanl, par three hole.
He still could have tied with a
birdie four on the 18th and his
third shot slopped about 15 feel
from the cup. Bill promptlv
missed two putts, the second from
two feet, and look a six. Collins
round and Ragan a 74.
Rosburg, 34, a resident of Palo
Alto, Calif., who plays out of
Overland Park, Kans., needed to
make up seven strokes to catch
the third-round leader Ted Kroll
of Ft. Lauderdale. Fla., who had
a 203 through 54 holes. Ted blew
up with an 81 and a 284.
For a time it appeared Arnold
Palmer, golfer-of-the-year in I960
would take it all here. But a 41
on the final nine and 75 total left
him at 284 with Kroll and Gard
ner Dickinson who was one of
three sub-par shooters here Sun
day with a one-under 7L Johnny
rat also eclipsed par by a stroke
for a 285 total.
We Ellis shot only a 289 but
he and his partner Frank Tatum
Jr., of San Francisco teamed for
a best ball of 67-252 that gave the
pro a $3,000 first prize. Dow Fin
sterwald and Fred Hammer of
Grosse Point Farms, Mich., were
next with 67-254. Finsterwald col
lected $1,500 there to go. with hie
$1,030 for a 286 among the indi
vidual pros.
Sophs, Ffosh Drop Games
CENTRAL POINT (Special) -
The Klamath Union sophomores
and freshmen invaded the home
gymnasium of the Crater Comets
Saturday and came away with
nothing but experience.
The sophomore Wildcats were
edged 49-46 and the freshmen ab
sorbed a humiliating 40-20 setback.
The Wildcats looked good until
three Comet varsity players en
tered the game, but the frosh
were pathetic.
The Wildcats led 25-24 at the
half in a close ball game, but In
the third quarter varsity play
ers Gary Wald, Mike Glines and
Louis Alvarez entered the game
tor the comets and the lead van
ished. Don Piper and Gail Phelps
had 10 points each in the Pelicans'
balanced attack, while Fred Kelly
and Grover Dahn added 18 be
tween them. '
The freshmen, suffering their
second loss of the season, wer
behind most of the way. Mar
Yunck led the baby Pelican scor.
ers with eight and Rodger Rogers
rebounded well.
The scoring summaries;
Klamatli Wildcata faal Tauln a.
Wpar 10, Kally . Horn a, fhalpt 10,
oann v. .
Cralar ( Maun 17, Gllnaa 10.
Rivanbaro I. Wald 7. Hlaolnrjothanv a.
Cardnar ?, Alvaraz.
Klamath Froth (30) Yunck I. Rogart
i, Enrlght 4, Holman a, Workman, Guyar,
Jackson, Blnnay.
traiar il lumnwrflald IX 8 wanton
13. Ryarton 1, Burd 10. Turnor 1, Grlltan
rvppar I, wniro.
Red Wings
Slip Back,
HawksK Win
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Detroit Red Wlnss Dulled
out the wrong script and today
found themselves mired even
deeper in fourth place In the Na
tional Hockey League race.
Going into Sunday night's ac
tion, the Red Wings had a chance
of pulling into a third place tie
with the Chicago Black Hawks.
The Wings had to beat the New
York Rangers and the Boston
Brums had to whip the Hawks.
Instead, the Rangers stopped
ttie Ked Wings, 5-3, and the
Hawks blasted the Bruins, 8-3.
That gave Chicago a healthy
four-point bulge in third place and
dropped the Wings even deeper
into a fourth place.
Dean Prentice scored three
goals and Pat Hannigan two in
the Rangers' triumph over the
wings.
The Wings took a two-goal lead
on scores by Parker McDonald
and Jerry Mclnyk, but couldn't
hold It. Hannigan, incidentally.
had notched only one goal in 30
previous games.
The Hawks, too, fell two goals
behind in the first period. But the
Hawks came back with four goals
in the second period to put the
game on ice. Bobby Hull, last
year's scoring champion, blasted
home his 22nd and 23rd goals of
the season.
California Collegiate Athletic Larry Jansco and Wes Wes-
Association chase, laces umgilrum, former New York Giant bat
Beach State Friday and Eanjtery, will coach for the San Fran
Diego Slate Saturday, eisce Giants this year.
VOTED MOST POPULAR
NEW YORK (UPI)-Andy He-
benton, hard-workina 31-vear-old
wing, has been, -voted the most
popular member of the New York
Rangers, by the 250,000-member
Catholic Youth Organization : of
New York. Hebenton will re
ceive a trophy Tuesday morning.
19
-'i -0iVe
J
1961
SIEIjqBi
SAFETY o
fUll fmnl I. ,
Clean. I. . T
front "Pe
pRVICE
FOR ONLY
sTVB Mill '
Lr,i '.JANUARY ' 1Ol ll
i isu i
I Mil
firttlont
MUFFLERS
2p?
BATTERY FAILURE
IS. THE .fl
. NUMBER
. Winter Srvlc
Problem
BATTERIES
with your elSkettenr
STORES
Phono TU 4-llOt
Hi nf Pino
il
gtles, 136-111. I try to go 10 rounds. leg it
: )