Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 September 1936 — Page 14
Victory Over Huskies Held S pecta acular
Williams Takes rakes Time Off to Appreciate Record of Bierman.
BY JOE WILLIAMS : Times Special Writer NEW YORK, Sept. 28.—The old sport reared back in his chair and rubbed his chin stubble. . . . “Yeah, I'll grant you all that. Hubbell can pitch any day for my dough. And there's nothing wrong with that Gehrig when it comes to belting ‘em, either Both these guys stack up with the best of all time. But I just want to ask you one thing, stranger, “How about that Minnesota football team?” How about what? Did the old gaffer actually mention s om ething about foot- ; ball? And every- ’ : body in the big Joe Williams town runing around in circles, rothing ai the mouth, jabbering about what threatens to be the most ‘hysterical World Series in 20 years! How do You like that! Football, of all things!!! > : Hmmm . . . Well, that was quite a thing that Minnesotans did at that, wasn't it? Oh, you didn’t read about it, eh? You were too busy studying the comparative figures on . DiMaggio and Ott, as if that will ever get, you anywhere, except maybe in the Wacky ward. Well, the Gophers opened their season by flat.d{ening Washington, 14 to 7. : ” n os
HAT of it? Just this; the Gophers haven't been bea‘en since they lost the last game of the 1932 season to Michigan on a field goal and their victory over Washington made it 18 in a row. There have been longer winning streaks in football hut not against the kind of cpposiion perm Bierman’s young men face year after year. It's easy to build up winning streaks in football against mediocre competition, The Gophers are doing it the hard way. They make a poiicy of playing a representative Big Ten schedule aad then as a sort of gay fillip they take on a formidable opponent from another section. This| year it was,
Washington on the Huskies home | grounds and before the season aad |
scarcely starte 2d.
ECAUSE The his had lost |
seven of last yearls champions and the Washingtons (were known to be unusually strong,|the winning streak seemed in jeopardy. There were other disadvantages such as . the long train ride, strange climate, partisan crowd, not to mention the mounting tenseness of the Gophers whenever they gave the winning streak a thought—which must have Reen often during the game on the coast. » That the young men ‘were able to vise above all these conditions establishes them more or less automatically as one of the mighty footBall powers of the season practically Wefore the said season even starts. 3 Brother Bierman is able to keep their flushed skulls down to normal dimensions in point of- self-esteem they figure to go through still another season without a defeat. It thay very well be that their hardest game of the year is already behind them.
HE , Spectacles SdoTess of the Gophers is not hard to explain. og material is usually there and the men who work with it know what it is all about. There isn't a better offensive coach in the country than Bernie Bierman, and his two line coaches, Bert Baston and ‘George Hauser, come close to being tops. + At any rate it's been a long time since you've seen or read about a weak Minnesota line. The combingtion, material, intelligent, modern offensive, sound line fundamentals, is both hard to beat and hard to find. In some football circles the rchaic impression still exists that e Minnesotans play stone age football, that because they are usually big players touchdowns are spawned out of brSwn and bone. The brawn is there all right and sometimes—in a not altogether flattering sense—the bone, but the fact is few teams in the country play as tricky, deceptive football as the Gophers. You may have noted their winning touchdown against the Washingtons was scored on a forward pass. A young man named Uram tossed it to a young man named King. Incidentally, my undercover men report that Uram and King shape up as the best forward pass combination in the Middle West, if not in the country. Such extravagant enthusiasm for September! It sounds like my undercover men have been nding too much time undercover, ng.
» \HE Stanford Indians, Rose Bowl champions, were knocked back on their heels almost before they could take a. bow. Santa Clara beat them in the first game of the season, 13 to 0. And yet it wasn't, or shouldn't have been a surprise. The Indians had a hard time beating Santa Clara last year, 9 to 6, when they had all those great seniors, men like Grayson, Hamilton, Moscrip, Alustiza. These men are 3
miles | work expected without purging
ty "irritation may be
rd pF ;
bladder, Joh Poe J J ] al ki disorders, may ‘of nagging rheumatio leg pains, low of and
ey
RC
Chris DalSasso (above),
Clinton High School lineman will
mentioned prominently last season for all-Conference honors, will lead the Hoosiers into the 1936 grid schedule at Bloomington Saturday against Centre College. captain the team
sends his squad
The former
from a tackle pc azainst the school he helped gain fame ag an unde: Colonels were def¢ Temple Universit).
sition when Coach Bo McMillin
graduate grid star. The Prayin’ ited, 50 to 17, last Friday night by
Weight Advantage
{naturally need different doses.
something wrong with |
| | | |
to Brown i in Bout
Orville Brown will have a weight | advantage of 10 pounds over Chris | Zaharias when the two grip in the | chief attraction on the four-bout heavyweight mat card of the Hercules A. C. tomorrow night at the| Armory. Brown, the “Indian death- | lock” artist from Wichita, scales] 222 and Zaharias of Pueblo, Colo., tips 212. | Zaharias, a rugger performer, defeated Fran Brown, Oryville's younger brother, three weeks ago. Chris is a brother of George (Ciy Baby) Zaharias. The rh stacks up as an action producer. One of the features of the supporting card will be the first appearance of Ls Michailoff, 205, Russian grappler who wears a beard. Ivan| goes against Rudy Laditzi, 230, Poughkeepsie, N. Y., in the 8:30 opener. Another newcomer, Jack |Hader, 215 Omaha, tackles Tom (Bulldog) Marvin, 212, Tulsa, Okla. in the semi-windup. The other tussle on the program sends Dick Lever, 238, Nashvilic, against :Roland Kirshmeyer, 230, former Oklahoma A. and M. aat star.
Lynn Nine Captures Title, Mexico Trip
By United Press| LOUISVILLE, Sept. 28.— The championship [of the- second annual American Baseball Congress today belonged to |Lynn, Mass. Lynn gained the title here yesterday when it turned back: Trenton, N.J., 9 to 5, in the finals. | By its victory the Massachusetts team won the right to go to Mexico for a three weeks’ international series. However, the club early today had not decided whether it would accept the offer.
Spangler, Kord Top Amateur Mat Show
Johnny Spangler, Muncie, is scheduled to meet Carl Kord, Oliver A. C, in the main event of the amateur wrestling show tonight at the Illinois-st arena. The first match is scheduled for 8:30, but if weather forces a postponement .the show is to be held Friday night. Six other bouts scheduled as follows: Jimmy Hudson vs. Buster Keaton: Henry Bhang vs. Virgil Arnold; Bob Burris vs. Wayne Cook ;
Don Russel vs. Paul Keys; Bob Ritzman vs. Dave Norris; Roy )encer vs. Russ Lunsford.
Sano HURLER SIGNED LOUIS, Mo., Sept. 28.—The MU Indians have signed Forrest Evans, 18-year-old St. Louis sandlot pitcher who has averaged 14 strikeouts a game in a municipal league this year, Scott Eddie Herr of the Indians said today.
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Games of
STATE COLLEGES
Purdue( 47; Ohio University, 0. Butler, 40; Evansville, 0 Wabash, 6; Illinois College, 2. Miami (O.), 14; De Pauw, 6. Franklin, 26; Oakland City, 0. Earihag, 26: Rofe Poly, v. Indiana State, 0; Tilinols Normal: 0 (tie}. Michigan Normal, 6: Ball State. 1.
Valparaiso, 7; St. Joseph's, 7 (tie). Illinois 'B. 12; Purdue B, 0.
OTHER COLLEGES
Akron, 33; Detroit ech 0. Alabama, 34; How ard, Alma, 6; Hope, Amherst, 0; Hobart, 0 (tie). Arizona ‘State, California Pol;
Arkansas’ Aggies, (B Teachers, Baldwin-Wallace, 657 Central St: Baylor, 13; Hardin- immons. 0. Bluffton, 19: Wittenber pa ornia, 39; California 3 ies 0 (first
the Facific, 0 21; 26;
’
Southern 1llinois yds
BR iornia, 14; College of (second game). California (Los Angeles Occidental, 0 (first game). California (Los Angeiés Pomona, 0 (second game). Carroll, 19;. St. Norbert’s Carson-Newman, 26; Western Carolina, 8. Chicago, 34; Lawrence, 0. genisnary 31; Jiinoje Wesleyan, 1, Citadel, 13; Ersk ine, 6. Clemson, 20; Virginia Tech, 0. Coe, 7; Upper Iowa, 2. Colorado State, 13; (Col.), 0.
Connecticut State, 27; Brown, 0. Cornell, 74; Alfred, 0. Cortland Teachers, 14; St. Lawrence, 7. Davidson, 6; North Carolina, 2. Dartmouth, 58; Norwich, 0. Duke, 6; Colgate, 0. Eastern "Kentucky. 39; Mars Hill, 0. Bastern Oregon, 37; Oregon Tech. 0. Franklin and Marshall, 7; ‘Albright, 6. Furman, 31; Wofford, 0.
Georgia, 15; Mercer, 6. Holy Cross, 45: Bates. 0.
branch),
branch),
Western = State
Iowa, 14; Carlton 0! Iowa State, 0; Iowa Teachers, Iowa Wesleyan, 6; Augustana, : Kansas State, 13° Fort Hays Aransas Wesleyan, 29; Sv rensure 0 Lebanon alley, 19; Kutztown (Psa.), 6. Lehigh. 16: Linfield, 45; ic College, 0. Louisiana State, 20; Rice. 7 Loyola (Los Angeles), : Redlands, 1 Manhattan. 32; S ture, T.
0 tie).
ichigan State, 27; Wayne, 0, iddlebury, 1: Union, 0 innesota, 14; Washington. 7. 1ssi ippi State, 20: Millsaps, 0. Montclair, 12; Brooklyn, 6. Moravian, 13; Dickinson, 5 Moorhead Teache 's. 3; Concordia
(Minn.). ary. 12: Davie 2nd Enkias. 0.
Mt. St. Lah 19; Laf Muskingum. 24: Otterktein. 3 Navy. 18: William and Mary. 6. New Hampshire, 66: Yowell Yextile, 0. ‘New Mexico State. 58: Panhandle Aggies, ee Mexico State, 58; Panhandle Aggies, New Mexico Teachers, ‘6: New Mexico, 0. North Carolina. 14; Wake Forest, 7. North Central, 21: Aurora, 0. Northeastern, 22: American International, Oklahoma. 0: Tulsa. 0 (tie kesh, 6; Northern Michigan Teach
TE aze 20. East Sroudsoure (rad, 0. Pitt. burgh. 533: Ohio Weslevan, 0. .
(ties.
idence, 27: Colby. 0. jolph Macon, 17: “Richmond. 7 e Island. 7: Maine, 0. ipon. 6: James Millikin 0. iver Falls (Wis.). 6: Macalester, 0. Santa Clara. 13: Stanford. 0. : Shippensburg (Pa.), 19; Wilson Teachers, i Southern California. 38; Orgson, State. 7. | Southern Methodist. orth Texas i Lib vi eto
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kansas, 53; Forces State oa lies, 0.10
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ball Results
Southern California, 38; Oregon State, 7.
rachers, ©t. Anselm, 14: Springfield (Mass.). St. Thomas (Pa.). 13; Mansfield Si achStevens Point (Wis.). 18; Jordan. 12. Ross. 12: Abilene Christian, 0. Tennecsee, 1; Chattanooga, 0. Texas Teen, Texas Christian. 0. Tulane, T Miseiset ippi. 6. Utzh, 26: Greeley State, 0. Utsh State, 12; Montana State, 0. Vanderbilt. 45: Middle Tennessee, 0.
nia, 26: Hampden-£ydney. 10. nia Military 24: South Carolina, hington (St. Louis). 32: Bradley, hington and Les, 27: Elon, 0. Washington State. 19: Montana. 0. Wesleyan. 0: Coast Guard. 0 (tie). ‘Westchester. 13: Slippery Rock (Pa.). 8. Western Illinois Teachers, 0; Parsons,
Kentucky. 33: West Liberty. Kentucky Industrial, 12; Wil-
‘Maryland, 38: Shenandoah. 0. Reserve, 40; Bowling Green, 0. yirgmia Wesleyan, 7; West Virgin: 40: Cincinnati. 6. ‘Western Virgiiia Wesleyan, 7; Geneva, 0. Wheaton, 19: Adri Whitewater (Wis.). CH Be trier Illinois, 0. Willamette, 45: Albany. 3 Williams, 20; Verm Wisconsin. 24: South ‘Dakota State, 7. . Wooster, 33: Ashland,
1. 0.
COLLEGE GAMES SUNDAY
Niagara, 21; Notre Dame B, Canisius, 56; Assumption Ontario), 0. St. Mary's (San Francisco), zaga, 13.
VANDIVER CAPTURES SKEET SHOOT EVENT
Richard Vandiver cracked 49 marks in the 50-target skeet shoot at the Capitol City Gun Club yesterday to take top honors. Havens
annexed the trapshoot with 32 of hits out of 35.
HIGH SCHOOL SCORES
(GAMES OF SATURDAY) Bosse (Evansville), 35; Boonville, 0 Reitz (Evansville), 12; Bloomfield, 6.
Central (Fort Wayne), 9; Central. Catholic (Fort Wayne), 0. Georgetown, Ill, 6; Wiley (Terre Haute), 0.
0 anawich, 26; Gon-
PRO GRID RESULTS NATIONAL LEAGUE
Pittsburgh Pirates, 10; New York Giants, 7. Boston, 14; Brooklyn Chicago Bears, 17; YP hitadelphia, 0 Chicago Cardinals vs. Detroit Lions at Detroit, postponed, rain.
AMERICAN LEAGUE N New York Yankees, 13; + 13; Syracuse Braves, 6.
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| battle. . .
Rules Altered
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Special Inducements Given Booster Bowlers in Central States.
* BY BERNARD HARMON
Local bowlers making plans for entry in a tral States tournament, which is to stage its eighteenth annual renewal at Jess Pritchett’s establishment Nov. 27 to Dec. 28. Charlie Cray, president of ihe association, has announced special changes in the rules which should attract a large number of booster Yeams with an 875 top team aver-
All entry money will be returned to the bowlers in prizes and medals. Sixty per cent of the booster entry fees will be returned to the booster teams in special prizes. And the booster teams also will be eligible for any cash they may grab off out of the main Central States Championship event:
Designed to Swell Entry
The numerous changes made in the rules governing the entry of the crack teams from the Middle West is designed to swell the number of competitors in the top flight. Any city that is a candidate for the tournament in 1937 must send a delegation of 24 or more teams. In addition to this new ruling the big bowling centers are required to enter at least one team for each 50,000 Fopfiasion, which means that Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Louis and Detroit must be represented by at least 12 teams. With the impetus given to local bowling by the A, B. C. championship tournament last spring, Indianapolis is expected to enter a total of 200 teams.
BOWLINGRAMS — Jim Waulle, former Butler football star, has failed to make any gains in the tenpin field. A pair of 118s and a 128 resulted from his “end runs” with the Holy Cross loop. . . . Al Botiin, Louie Koehler and a ‘few other Evangelical pin smackers threatened the 600 mark last week, but failed to develop the one mark needed. . Acrobat or no acrobat, Paul Striebeck is pounding the maples for nice totals. . . . That 126 planted between a pair of double centuries proved fatal to Baily’s total in the Courthouse League. Leo Miles is again in action in the Fountain Square Merchants . . and is about due for one of those mighty blasts. . . . The Grauel combination swept through its opposition in the Reformed Church. . . The State Highway boys will have to speed up to catch Jess Smythe. . . . That Patrick Henry League is forging to the front. . . . It’s seven 600 series is proof. . . . Earl Huber threatened Wilbur Rosener last week, but as yet Frank Mille has failed to keep pace with his rivals: . +. Curt Wray is in a slump. . . . No 600s, although he has been In action with the Rudy Furnaces in the Commercial. . . . Charley Bowes is back at the anchor position for Bis Bowes Sealfasts in the Hoosier
Virgil Perkins has. his “ball hawks” clicking in the Indiana Recreation. . . . Nine straight wins. . . . McGregor made up for his poor total in the Indianapolise Church with a comeback in the St. John Evangelical. . . . Matt Pohl and Jim Hollenbaugh cut loose ' with totals that sank young Jess Pritchett in the Polk circuit. . . . And Pryor Smith is about due to make things tough for the youngster. . . . That K. of C. League looks like the K. of C. of the old Capitol Alleys days, but most of the old-timers are missing. . . . The Uptown Recreation boys are about due to share the iimelight with the Indianapolis League pastimers on Wednesday nights. . . . That 672 of John Bentley’s reminded the boys of the John who a few years ago was one of the South Side’s “toughest”. . . . Elmer Fox looks like “tops” in the Optical. Clayton Rigsbee is evidently in for a big year. . . . He mowed ’em down in a practice session at the Pennsylvania. . . . Johnny Hines was very
Lager-Indianapolis Paint & Color . Wonder why? ... Walter English is again hitting for totals that gained him the name of “Flash.” . . . Our apologies to Chester Barkman, who tied Frank Liebtag for high total in the Telephone League. . . . George Street was happy after topping the Chevrolet Body boys. . . . It was the best total
way in the Cen- |.
" was due to lose a game were un-
much interested in the Falls City|
of his career.
Rumors to the effect Minnesota
founded. The giants of the North opened their new season in an intersectional struggle with Jimmy Phelan’s University of Washington Huskies at Seattle Saturday and won, 14-7. It was the eighteenth win without a defeat for the Gophers. Coach Bernie Bierman (above) arranges difficult schedules, but his Gophers keep finishing out in front. Purdue is the only Hoosier school on the Minnesota schedule. this year, playing. at Minneapolis on Oct. 24.
Sterlings to Play for League Title
Times Special RICHMOND, Ind. Sept. 28.—The Sterling Beer baseball team of Indianapolis won the right to oppose the Richmond Kautskys for the championship of the IndianaOhio League yesterday by defeating the Middletown Armcos, 12 to 3. Opening tilt between the Sterlings and the Kautskys originally was | scheduled for the second game. of | a double-header yesterday but was stopped after two innings bucause of rain. The final series is to begin here next Sunday. Score: : Sterling Beer 001 020 711—12 15 1 Middletown 000 100 110— 3 6 3
Kertis and Fornell; Duffey, and Colman.
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| Storti’s Homers
Brewers Win Long Session
in. Ninth and Eleventh Defeat Buffalo Bisons.
By United Press MILWAUKEE, Sept. 28. — Mil-
waukee’s' Brewers will go into the|
third game of the “Little World Series” tonight with a two-game lead over the Buffalo Bisons and almost unanimous backing for the junior baseball title. The Brewers, rained out Saturday night, probably will assign Luke Hamlin to the pitching task tonight, while Carl Fischer, southpaw ace who has recovered from a slightly turned ankle, is éxpected to start for the Bisons. The series will move on to Buffalo after tonight's game. - Lin Storti made an impressive bid for the series hero role yesterday when he homered in the ninth with one aboard to tie the score, and| homered again in the eleventh to win the game, 6 to 5, before 10,529 fans. Buffalo made 10 hits off Hatter, and the winning pitcher, Forest Pressnell, and played errorless ball. The Brewers, victims of a first in-
i ping triple play, included a lone
error with their 13 hits off Kline and Ash. The triple play caught Uhalt between third and -home, Gullic between first and second, and Wilburn sliding into third.
‘Don Budge Holds
Win Over Perry
By United Press LOS ANGELES, Sept. 28—Donald Budge of Oakland, Cal, kept the Pacific Southwest tennis championship in men’s singles division today because he refused to vacate by defeat even before the world’s ace amateur. The red-haired Budge beat Fred Perry of England by the scores 6-2, 4-6, 6-2, 6-3, and Perry admitted he had one of “my moody days.” In women’s play, Gracyn Wheeler of Santa’ Monica upset national champion Alice Marble of San Francisco, 7-5, 2-6, 6-3.
Christie Wins Best Rifle Shoot Rating
Times Special FRANKFORT, Ind, Sept. 28.— Christie topped 14 members of the Hoosier Rifle Club of Indianapolis in a shoot for government rating medals at the local range yesterday. Christie scored 301 out of a possible 350. A score of 290 or better classes a rifleman as a sharpshooter, while 240 distinguishes him as a marksm=.
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3 Deaths—Funerals Indianapolis Times, Monday.. Sept. 28, 1938. CARTON—Anna, beloved . sister of and Aunt of Jong
Alice caren, died EE ietie Se
"Services 88. m. Friends invi (Please omi Howes)
HIGGINS—Clarine (nee Collins), below: wife of William G. Higgins, daughter Erd Collins and sister of Mrs Norrell and Glenn Collins. all "ot anapolis, pa unda’ Services ay the BuCHA MORTUARY Tuesday. 2 p. m. invited. Burial Crown Rin. may call at the mortuary.
LINES—Nannie. age 5¢ years, beloved w of Alonzo Lies s, mother of Clifford Miller, sister of Lula Mansfield and sister cf Ollie Middleton. passed away ENTRAL Puheral at SHIRLEY BROS. C PEL, 946 N. Illinois. 3 p day. Friends invited. Friends TAY y cai atter noon Monday. Burial Memoria
ay
petal W ne
'COURY—Edward, husband of Freida, father of Tilman and Hexn McCoury of 33 Wisconsin-st. passed away Sunday mom. 1 Tees the residence, urial Louisville. my,
MvVEY—Ethel of Atlanta, 1nd. belov wife of Lon McVey, mother of Harry an Dewey McVey. sister of Janette Walton, Ruth Naden, John. Dolph and Ebert Sheperd, passed away Sept. 27. 1936, age 5 Services Tuesday 1:30 p. M. E. Church. Burial Crowniand Cemetery. Noblesville, Ind. Friends inYited, [Noblesville paper please copy.} NBLOSSOM SERVICB.
NEWLIN—Rov C.. husband of Vivian H. father of William H. and Marian, 2054 Ruckke- passed awav Saturday evee Tvioes at the FLANNER & Ble N MORTUARY Tuesdayv.-10 a. invited. Burial
at
Friends Park.
SCHURMAN—Emilie. age John' Schurmann, sister of Mabel and Mrs. Ida Schakel of Five ine Funeral from ate home, 22 Kansas-st, og Burial Crown Hill, K ERVICE.
. fife of John R. Shull, s Shull, passed 2 away
Sept Er. 2 call at the home any time after 5 p. m. Monday.
SMITH—William J.. of 808 Division-st. bes loved father of Mrs. .Era Kinney. ae Hazel Horsley of Miami, Fla. and H Smith. brother of Mrs. Alice Marshall, ot Los Angles. Cal. passed awav 193, age 36 years. Funeral edness
2 the W. st MORTUARY. 1321-23 wv. EAN Loren may call at the morutary after 6 p. m, Monday Burial Anderson Cemetery. Friends ‘invited.
STONEHILL—Mary B. wife of Ira L, Stonehill. mother of Rohert L., sister of William B. Lambert. passed away at the residence, 4912 Central-ay, gunday eyes nin. ral Wednesday. 2 the McNEELY MORTUARY, Meridian-st. Friends invited. may call at mortuary after Monday.
TERHUNE—Sadie Ballance. age 47 years, beloved wife of Davis C. Terhune. daugh= ter of Mrs. Annie Ballance. mother of Margaret Edna Terhune and sister of Virgil. Will and Carey Ballance and Mrs, Taylor Errick. Mrs. Walter Scott and Mrs. William Pearson massed away at her residence. 2450 N. Harding-st. Sune dav morning. Funeral at SHIRLEY BROS, Canal CHAPEL, 946 N. Monday. Friends invited. Boral ‘Franklin, Ky.
1838 orth Friends 7 Pp. m,
———
{1 In Memoriam
POUNDS — In loving remembrance of our dear mother, MYRTLE SARAH NDS,
who Sent. 28, 1935. And 2 she lies in peaceful sleep, Her memory we shall alwavs keep. Sadly missed by her. dsr. “mye "vera Pounds, Madorna Pounds Murphy and Mrs. Edna Smith
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SHIRLEY BROS. co.
346 N_Illinois-st
J. C. WILSON
DR-0321
9 Lost and Found
LOST—Lady’s wrist watch, led dovmich 3 Sentimental Jeutle ard. HU-4366.
I oats CEP San tern cenit FREE SAMPLE— fer aod. Bie" Duct Jira
A EZ
Blygder 2d, Bie | ICE? ? Bring this ad now
no no. obligation. It 1 rs _ | Em Butt lo Rak More Classifie “OnPagel5
Friends invited. Bue.
Washington
Tilinois-st, fg
Phone - L1-7118
DR-4477 |
kit le
wife
Sind Saturday. 2 a. m., mother of Gears A .
passed away one year ago today, :
BE-1588
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1330 Pro=pect-st Se
Tine
