Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 July 1942 — Page 7
BS EL On
EE
als a
MONDAY, JULY 27, 1942
SPORTS...
By Din
aniel
Eddie Ash, Times’ sports editor, is on gation; He will be back in this Swrieg | Au &
NEW YORK, JULY 27.—RED BURMAN’S knockout by Tami Mauriello in nine rounds in Madison Square Garden last Thursday night, climax of a progressive shellacking, was not just another defeat in Clarence’s
inglorious record.
It marked Burman’s farewell to the
more affluent roped squares, and once again emphasized
the strange fact that, no matter how brilliant their own
achievements, heavyweight champions are singularly without honor as pickers of potential pugilistic strength.
Burman was the personal discovery and, for a time, the seemingly justifiable pride of Jack Dempsey.
When the Manassa Mauler
picked up the sorrel top, he saw in the 186 pounder .a fighter who might rekindle the
spark which
Jack believed had gone out
among white heavyweights with his own defeat by Gene Tunney. When Jack saw Bur-
man operate
with knife and fork in the
eatery opposite the garden, now no longer
Burman
the mauler's enterprise, he was certain that here was his proto-type in the making. But after Burman had been knocked out by Joe Louis in five rounds, he lost to Melio Bettina, Booker Beckwith and even Joe
Maxim. Now the knockout by Maurieilo, and at last Dempsey is
convinced—and doubtless chagrined.
Sharkey Discovered a Prospect + However, Jack need not be particularly downcast because he has
failed to" discover the real thing in fistic furniture.
Heavyweight
kings have been trying it from away back and insofar as I have been able to determine, only one of them has enjoyed even a halfway success. He was Jack Sharkey, who discovered Ernie Schaaf. You will remember Schaaf as the 13-round victim of Primo
Carnera, then the utterly fantastic,
bizarre, prognathous and gar-
antuan leader of the heavies, right here in New York on Feb. 10, 1033. A few days later Schaaf died from the effects of a brain
injury which perhaps traced back his 10-round encounter with Max August.
to the beating he suffered in Baer in Chicago the previous
Whether, had he lived on, Schaaf would have developed into a top rate bruiser is a question with which you can raise a tumult
in any gathering of the ring cognoscenti.
clever.
Without doubt, Ernie was
Gentleman Jim Corbett, the greatest exponent of boxing im the annals of the ring, fancied himself most emphatically as a judge of
maulers.
Right on through the years he kept picking them—and
right on to the finish, he found himself unflattered by his choices.
Maher Picked for Guinea Pig
Corbett’s first misadventure in picking a winning heavyweight came in, 1896, when Jim was champion of the world. The former bank clerk said he had tired of the roped arena, and announced that he had awarded his title to the Irishman Peter Maher, who still is around here somewhere to tell about his sad experience as
Jim's protege.
The suspicion is strong that Corbett wanted to use Maher as a guinea pig against Bob Fitzsimmons, who had been clamoring for a chance at the title. Maher defended the phony gift title against
Ruby Robert across the Rio Grande from Langtry, Tex., on Feb. 21,
1896, with American soldiers and Texas rangers looking on from
the Lone Star side of the river.
George Siler gave his instructions to the battlers, the bell rang, and then Maher was carried to his corner. The fight had lasted
one minute 35 seconds.
A saddened Corbett took the championship back, but did not keep it for long. On St. Patrick's day the following year, at Carson City, Nev, Pompadour Jim was knocked out in the 14th round by what Bob Davis advertised as “the newly devised solar plexus punch,” delivered by the freakish but hard-hitting Fitz. Jim Jeffries, who succeeded Fits as the heavyweight titlefolder, has picked one punk after another, -
John L. Could Only See John L.
Jack Johnson has picked many a bloomer himself. You may recollect that he glimpsed too many damning flaws in Joe Louis’ fistic makeup when the Brown Bomber came up. Louis has not made the mistake of discovering a heavyweight protege. He is interested in Holman Williams.
Maxie Baer picked a good one
in his brother Buddy, but the
high promise held out by Junior's great size and weight has collapsed under the impact of punches delivered by Louis, Gunner
Barlund and even Eddie Blunt.
Gene Tunney’s standout selection was the gigantic Abe Simons,
twice belted out by Louis,
There was one great American champion who never hooked
up with any budding marvels, and
he was John L. Sullivan, And
when he lost the title to Corbett, Sullivan perhaps felt that the American ring had died. No proteges of ring ability thenceforth attracted him. He went from booze to reform, then to the lecture platform and finally to Valhalla, from which he looks down on most of our heavyweights and laughs himself sick.
Speaker at Home
CLEVELAND, July 27 (U. P.).— Tris Speaker, one. of baseball's im-
mortals and chairman of the Cleve-|
land boxing commission, was at home today to complete his recov-
ery from a maj ration per1 ed at Lakeside Rospial three ks ago. J Advertisement
Rush Relief To Sufferers From
: Ria Lo
‘N.Y. Giants Buy Van Lingle Mungo
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn,, July 27 (U. P.)~—Van Lingle Mungo left here today to return to major league baseball. The big right handed pitcher, who was sold by Minneapolis of the American association to the New York Giants Saturday night, has won 11 games and lost three for the Millers this year, although he has pitched only three complete games. For Mungo, Minneapolis got Norman Jaeger, first baseman, and Rube Fischer, right handed pitcher, from the Giants’ Jersey City farm in addition to an unannounced sum of money.
= | Rates Jurges Best NEW YORK, July 27.—-Larry French of the Dodgers calls the Bill Jurges of 1935 the best shortstop
‘he ever saw.
1918 by pulling up to within three
York Yankees. All that has changed with bewildering rapidity. under wily Luke Sewell have staged one of the greatest winning spurts
“lin the club’s history. Paced by the
revived hitting of Outfielder Chet Laabs and the potent pitching of a quartet of veterans, St. Louis has scored 18 victories in 25 starts and
.|lis now perched solidly in fourth -| place, only three games away from
second. Laabs Has 19 Homers
Laabs has smacked 19 homers, two less than Ted Williams, the major league leader, and Johnny Niggeling, All Hollingworth, Elden Auker and George Caster are giving Sewell the pitching he prayed for. Niggling has won four in a row and 10 for the year, Hollingsworth has clicked for seven wins—including three of his last four—against
{three losses, Auker has chalked ‘up
11 triumphs and Caster, serving chiefly as a relief pitcher, has won six against only one defeat. The Red Sox, who dropped 13 games behind the Yankees yesterday when they bowed twice to the Browns, 9-2 and 4-3, have lost 12 of their last 17. Perhaps their downfall began July 3 when the Yalkees slapped
them down after they had climbed
to within three games of the top. And perhaps the individual failure of Dick Newsome has helped. Newsome, who won 19 last year, has lost five in a row and seven for the year, Four of his failures have been one-run defeats, however.
Senators Split
The Browns slammed seven runs across in the first two innings as Denny Galehouse held the. Red Sox to four -hits in the first game. Charley Wagner gave up the nightcap’s; deciding run in the ninth. Wil-| liams hit two homers, “one in each ‘game. The Yankees made it three straight over Detroit with a 5-2 triumph. Red Ruffing limited the Bengals to seven hits for his 10th win and Charley Keller hit a brace of four-baggers for the Yanks. Sid Hudson survived several tough spots to bring the Senators a 2-0 win over Cleveland in the opener of a doubleheader but the Indians bounced back with a 14-hit assault to take the nightcap, 7-1. Chicago shaded Philadelphia, 2-1,
.|Ted Lyons scattering eight hits in
the opener of a double-header. Luman Harris halted the Sox with four blows for his 10th win as the ‘A’s pushed over one run to win the nightcap in the 10th, 3-2. Reds Replace Giants The Cincinnati Reds replaced the Giants in third place in the National league, scoring twice, 6-2 and 2-1, over the New Yorkers. Elmer
Broadway Doy
Times Special NEW YORK, July 27.—Jack Doyle’s ears were burning today. Broadway's dean of the calculating sect which lays odds that your guess on anything in baseball is wrong was being talked
about by Joe McCarthy and Leo Durocher. And by neither manager, with kindliness. For Doyle had complicated for Marse Joe of the Yankees and Lippy Leonidas of the Dodgers the problem of fighting that rising tide of overconfidence on their ball teams. Every year, in late July, since the days when Gen. Grant was our No. 1 fan and Hoss Radbourne performed pitching miracles for Providence in the National league, it had been. Doyle's habit to issue revised prices on the chances of the baseball teams. But for 1942, Jack has announced, there will be no such corrected table of odds. “The Yankees and the Dodgers are in,” Doyle shouted from his podium of probabilities. “In-so-far as the pennants are concerned, betting is dead for the season. Of course, if you want to wager on the world series, that's another matter. I think I will make the Yankees favorites again.” f J ” »
Superstitious Joe
Not content with winning the American league championship for the Bombers, Doyle, in late July, has given the world title to them, as well, and made that breach with McCarthy doubly wide. To be sure, any club moving toward August with a lead of better than 10 lengths might be -suspected of thinking about the world * series. But around the bailiwick of the Bombers, any player who became so foolhardy as to mention the classic at this time would be tossed right into the doghouse, to keep Patrolman Rosar company. It’s not merely that McCarthy is superstitious. He confesses that. He even admits early morning conferences with the little men. But ever since Jge saw the Athletics score 10 runs in one inning against his 1929 Cubs in the world series, he won't admit this is Saturday until he has verified it by the calendar.Durocher’s battle against com-
games of the pace-setting New|.
The Browns,|
St. Louis Browns Whip Red Sox Fiviees 3 Gdmes Out of 2d
By PAUL SCHEFFELS United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, July 27—It was difficult to determine what amazed baseball people more today, the rapid rise of the St. Louis Browns or the equally fast fadeout of the Boston Red Sox. It seems like only a few days or so ago that the Browns were staggering around in the second division of the American league while the Red Sox were starting talk of the first Fenway park pennant since
® = =»
es Lo
Niggeling + + « helping Browns.
Riddle held the Giants to eight hits with the help of Joe Beggs while Max Marshall drove in four runs in the opener. Frank McCormick’s fourth-inning homer with the bases empty provided the winning edge in the nightcap in which Paul Derringer gave the Giants seven hits. Brooklyn beat Pittsburgh, 3-2 and 5-3. Joe Medwick’s two doubles and a single sent in all of the {Dodgers’ runs in the opener. {Brooklyn - belted Johnny Lanning {from the box with a three-run, 'game- clinching rally in the third inning of the nightcap. The Braves rapped Johnny Beazley for nine hits, scoring four runs in the second, taking the first game of a double bill from the Cardinals, 5-2. St. Louis cracked through against Jim Wallace for three in the fourth and two more in the sixth and won the nightcap, 5-3. Tommy Hughes and Frank Hoerst pitched the Phils to a twin win over the Cubs, 4-3 and 6-1. Hughes stopped the Bruins with six hits for his sixth victory in the first game. Hoerst scattered 10 blows well enough to win his fourth in the nightcap. Merrill ay singled home the winning run in the ninth inning of the opener. Chicago catcher. Clyde McCullough hit three homers in his first three trips.
le Shouts, 'The
Yanks and Dodgers Are In’
placency and taking things for granted 1s the tougher one. The Yankees really look safe. But the Dodgers could get into trouble. There is, in the American league, no contender packing the potential dynamite which lies in the lineup of the Cardinals. There is not, behind the Bombers, a club with so many young, moneyhungry, ambitious and determined
players as you will discover among the Red Birds.
” ” ” One-Stadium Series Most emphatically, Brooklyn has the strongest club in the National league. " It is out in front largely because of the hurl-
ing achievements of such oldsters as Larry French, Johnny Allen and Curt Davis. But when a team is thriving through a spark rekindled in veterans with brittle bones and muscles which take long to mend—well, you sort of live from day to day, and don’t like to hear the sort of stuff Jack Doyl¢ has broadcast about the Dodgers being in. As for Jack’s early designation of the Yankees as world series favorites-—he had better stay away from the environs of Ebbets field. Brooklyn insists it has the team of the year, the ball club of destiny. The Yankees may be rated a super-team in New York, but around Flatbush they are just “lucky phoneys.” I am told that if the Bombers and the bridegrooms are in it again, there is a good chance .that all the games will be played in Yankee stadium. This year there will be circumstances which will kill off opposition to an all-stadium series even before it can be organizad. The 1942 world series will be played for war funds—army and navy relief, Red Cross and possibly U. 8. O., as well.
Browns Purchase
Ostermueller ST. LOUIS, Mo., July 27 (U. P.).
today purchased the veteran south-
association. Ostermueller,
—The St: Louis Browns, now only three games out of second place in the American league after a win-|assn ning streak of more than a month, J
paw, Fritz Ostermueller from their|T. Toledo farm club in the American
who has won 10
Longines Should Be Olle . After a Year or So, Paul A. Grays Says.
A watch such as the famius Longines 1s one of the world’s 11::st perfect mechanisms and shouid be treated as such, in the opinich of Paul A. Gray of Gray, Gribbe:' & Gray, Indiana’s oldest credit jes elers. By observing a few simple tics, a fine watch can be made to ¢ ve perfect service for many years, :ccording to Mr. Gray, but oft:n these important considerations, gre overlooked. : “It is important, for instante, never to open the case of | watch because of the liability of
‘|dust particles entering the mech ne lism,” Mr. Gray said. >
for accurate timekeeping. If We ir
. | watch’ stops, or runs erratically, do
not shake or tap it but take it immediately to your watchmaker. Always remove wrist watches Ww: washing the hands. : “The Longines watches in tur store,” Mr. Gray said, “have pien provided with a spring that vill drive them at least 30 hours. lor the best results, wind your wa c only once each day, preferably in the morning. Wind it fully. |Gine cannot overwind a Longines wat. ch, Regular habits in winding a wg ch will help it to maintain better ti: me for you. “Of course, if you run your Bu 0=mobile without oil you will ‘burn out a bearing. To be surg, ou change your oil every 1000 jmiiles or so. Do you know that your we ich also needs regular oiling? The halance wheel of a Longines tials 3558 miles a year. To lubric: jeweled bearing 1-100th of a of oil is put into it at the fa: The total oil in the many bes1ilgs and jewels of the entire watch is only 1-10th of a drop. Obviously it cannot last forever. It will last 18 month’s in a man’s pocket wiih, 12 months in a man’s strap with, 10 months in a woman's watch. The watch will run after the oil is ¢Xhausted but not perfectly. | “So at periodical intervals your watch should be brought in "to be overhauled, taken apart, cleaned of old oil and dirt, the parts poli ed and re-oiled.
Parts Interchangeable |
“Suppose you should drop. viur Longines watch and the pivot of the balance breaks. We secui¢ an exact duplicate from the Longiies factory. The broken part is removed and the new inserted. There is no fitting to be done. Your Lor is substantially as new. The reason many matches never again run iccurately after once being repiiied is because no amount of truinz‘up and fitting of a similar, substiiite part makes it identical with a & Ne uine part. “The jewels in a Longine working jewels, rubies of « quality, scientifically sized and 1 portioned to diminish friction snd retain oil. In many watches he jewels are sheer ornaments or fincorrectly designed. . “A patented hook attaching he mainspring to the barrel of ihe Longines provides for a mote cintral application of the motor p:iwer, eliminating friction and the 1jss of power inherent in most watches. “Longines escapements are mn 2tjculously finished by skilled watihmakers; exposed pallets are perf: pt ly formed from rubies.
Balance Is Heavier
“The heavy, compensated, cui »imetallic balance of the Longiies compared with the lighter uniut balances of many watches, is ¢nother reason for the superior titiekeeping qualities of the Longiies watch. “The same results from Jorge nd small oscillations of the balance is assured in the Longines throug: a precise and scientific raising znd bending of the last coil of the hairspring and the position of the 1 ner attachment of the spring to it balance. In most watches ist is done in a hit or miss manner: no two ordinary watches acting ali ze. “The Longines standard demar| ds of a Longines watch that it meaintain its accuracy over a long life and to this end only the finest 17 aterials are used. The accuracy vith which the Longines watch is nice is attested by the fact that {: parts are interchangeable with sv ilar parts of the same Longiies models everywhere., With many watches parts are only rouglily made to shape. The effectiver ss of a repair depends entirely on {he skill with which the new part, is fitted to the watch. “For these reasons the Longi es watches are favorites with griat scientists, explorers, famed aviztors and others who demand the fir: st in gp aniong ”
Incorporations
Shackiton Piano Co., pEeniusky €oID Hae tion; admitted to Indi des! in musical ruments. : & Bass Lake Development Co., 0 2imepdinant changing name to Base 1; Xe ul Sevarin Hotel Co. Inc. Indians: as; amendment of articles of incorporat in: Superior Ready Mixed Concrete Corp, ; dissolution. : The Sullivan County 4-H Agrictit ral oy og capital stock; Pound Eder ds,
3 TS. i . Co, ine, c. 4014 Buell d= re, ayne; agent, 3 ENS, 1145 Westover . et 1000 shzies without par vale: to manufactur: «nd sell Kup-Lox piston rings, pistons: nd automob accessories; H. :Zourt opper, Herbert . _ Clemens, Fed Clemens.
.|tives
"WORKERS ADVANGES
Gets Insurance Diploma
E. M. Karrmann, left, treasurer of the American United Life
Insurance Co. of Indianapolis, was
one of 50 life insurance company
investment officers from 24 states who received certificates from A. J. McAndless, president of the American Life convention, at the third annual Life Officers Investment seminar at Indiana university last
week.
HOLC LOANS PAID | AHEAD OF SCHEDULE
CHICAGO, July 27. — Indiana borrowers of the Home Owners’ Loan Corp. repaid more than their monthly billings in the first half | of this year, according to Charles! W. Collins, HOLC regional manager.
" “This splendid record,” Mr. Collins said, “bespeaks the willingness of Indiana mortgagors to co-oper-ate fully in the national program to curtail inflationary tendencies for post-war benefits. Likewise it has enabled the HOLC to reduce expenses by closing its Indianapolis office, retaining, however, an adequate staff of 10 field representafor servicing of accounts through personal - contracts at the home. “These representatives, covering the entire state, report that an increasing number of borrowers are making regular payments in addition, to the amounts called for in their contracts. Of the 39,000 active HOLC accounts in the state, nearly 95 per cent are current or less than three months in arrears and less than one-fourth of one per cent are in arrears more than.a year. “The HOLC loaned $112,170,592 to 48,824 distressed Indiana home owners during the depression. In later years it advanced some $2,624,000 to these borrowers, chiefly to help them meet tax burdens. Only by recalling the condition of HOLC borrowers when they were refinanced can anyone appreciate they way they have overcome their difficulties. As of June 30, the HOLC had collected approximately $56,000,000 in Indiana or about 48 per cent of: all the money the corporation loaned or advanced in the state.”
BUYING POWER OF
NEW YORK, July 27 (U. P.).— Earnings and purchasing power of industrial wage earners increased slightly during May to the highest levels on record, according to the division of industrial economics of the conference board. Workers in 25 industries surveyed by the board’s economists received an average weekly wage of $38.93 during May by working an average of 42.7 hours at 90.5 cents an hour. That représented an increase of .6 per cent over the weekly average for April, 17.5 per cent over May, 1941, and 36.4 per cent more than the average weekly wage paid in these industries in 1929. The conference board asserted that weekly earnings have shown a gradual upward trend in these 25 industries since June, 1940. In the last seven months of 1940, it was said, the average increase was 1.3 per cent a month, while in 1941 the monthly average rise was 1.5 per cent and in the first five months of this year, 1.6 per cent. The largest single increase was 4.2 per cent recorded last January. Hourly earnings of 90.5 gents for May were 1 per cent higher than in April, 13.3 per cent higher than in the 1941 month and 53.4 per cent over 1929, the board said. - The average work week of 42.7 hours reported for May was 3.4 per eent longer than in the corresponding 1941 month, but was 02 per cent shorter than in April of this| year and 11.6 per cent shorter than the average for all of 1929, At the same time, the conference board reported that “real” weekly earnings of industrial workers, or their dollar earnings adjusted for changes in the cost of living, rose 0.5 per cent during May to a record high 5.6 per cent above May, 1941, and 40.3 per cent over 1929. The increase reflected an advance of 0.6 per cent in weekly earnings against a rise of only 0.2 per cent in living costs.
| BUSINESS AT A GLANCE.
Quebec Power Co. first half net profit $598,640 vs. $546,550 year ago. ! Twin Coach Co. first half net’ profit $378,153, equal to 80 cents a share, vs. $383,313, or 81 cents, year ago. Moneta Porcupine Mines, Ltd. June quarter net profit $108, 356, equal to 4 cents a share, vs. $136,566, or § cents, year ago.
{below normal and insufficient
600 CARPENTERS
NEEDED AT ONCE
The U. S. emplc, incnt service re-|
ported today that 600 carpenters are needed immediately for work on a government war project in Indiana. “This order calls for experienced frame carpenters,” said R. Edward Hays, manager of the local employment office. “Good house and barn
carpenters will be accepted but no|®
rough or form carpenters will be hired unless they are exceptionally good. Wage scale will be $1.25 per hour based on a 40-hour week with time and a half for overtime. As soon as floodlights can be installed, workers will spend 60 hours a week on the job. “All men must supply their own tools. Minimum tool-kit requirements include frame and tri-square, block, floor and raveting plane, wrecking bar, brace and bit, hammer and hatchet, level, plumb bob and one or two good (preferably eight-point) saws. Application should be made at 148 E. Market st.”
REALTORS ASK VOIGE | IN RENT CONTROL
CHICAGO, July 27 (U. P.).—The|
National Federation of Property Owner associations sought changes today in the administration of the federal rent control program which would give wider powers to regional rent directors. The federation, in letters forwarded te Price Administrator Leon Henderson and members of congress, the program and asked that these five changes be made: 1. An “adjustment factor” be allqwed to compensate for inequalities caused by freezing rent levels
pay maintenance and operating costs. 2. Local directors be given. power to adjust cases “involving hardships to welfare and charitable institutions, widows, aged people and others.” 3. Property owners who “rehabilitate or revitalize” rental units be given the same consideration as owners who make capital improvements. 4. Increased income be allowed to compensate for increased taxes:-and other uncontrolled maintenance. 5 “An effective measure of responsibility and authority” be given local "organizations of “resnonsible citizens” an “impossible burden of cost and administration.”
LIVING COSTS STILL RISING, U. S. REPORTS
WASHINGTON, July 27 (U. PJ). —Living costs in major cities increased .4 per cent from June 2 to June 15, Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins reported today. Prices of goods under the office of price administration ceilings declined .1 per cent, but uncontrolled goods increased 1.2 per cent during the two weeks period, Miss Perkins said. Between May 15 and June 15 uncontrolled prices advanced 2.4 per cent while controlled items declined .8 per cent. The cost of living index on June 15 was 116.4 per cent of the 1935-39 average, a net increase of .3 per cent over May 15.
pledged co-operation in| ees
to|
to relieve the OPA of °
LOUISVILLE AREA GETS RENT ORDER
JEFFERSONVILLE, Ind. July 27
(U. P.).—A compulsory ceiling on .
rent in the defense-housing area
‘which includes Floyd and Clark
counties and the entire Louisville area will go into effect Aug. 1.
The federal rent control program
was scheduled to go into effect July 1, but it was excluded along with four other of the 18 areas at the last minute because a preliminary report to OPA indicated the area
was complying with the recom- a
mended July, 1941, ceiling date. However, after it was learned that the rent control program was not to become effective, there was a pronounced upward movement in rents in the defense-housing area which resulted in a flood of eviction proceedings in the Louisville and the Floyd and Clark county courts; Thomas H. Young of the third magistrate court in Louisville notified OPA of the condition and urged that immediate federal rent control be introduced.
1
MILK
® Sanitary Pouring Lip ® No Bottle Wash ® No Bottle Return ® Less Storage Space
Sold by your neighborhood grocer and A&P Food Stores
v FURNACES—STOKERS BAS BURNERS — OIL BURNERS
You will like our cleaning and repairing service. Phone for free inspection.
L1-4576
HALL-NEAL
FURNACE CoO. 322-32 N. CAPITOL AVE.
WHEN THIS APPEARS -
HU-4252 TERMITE
CONTROL GO.
FREE ESTIMATES AD Work Guaranteed 5 Years
SETA APPLICATOR
Your home is one of your greatest investments. See that it is protected. Let us give you a free estimate. They're Barrett shingles. . . . That's all you have to know.
SMALL MONTHLY PAYMENTS
INDIANA ROOFING & SIDING CORP.
605 Seo. Capitol RI. 1359
ALL PURPOSE
Fish, Poultry, Fruits,
Freeze Meats, Vegetables
when prices are low . eat months later when prices are high . let the savings pay for your freezer. For the FARM, Home and Merchant. Ask us for details. Save vour Locker Plant in your home. LOW DOWN PAYMENT—EASY TERMS
Write Today for Free Information
QUILLEN BROS. REFRIGERATOR COU. 1639 Lafayette Rd., Open Sun., 1-4P. M
mmenss Territories Open for Dealersemmmes
Come in and See Our Stock of
ARMSTRONG’S LINOLEUM
Custom-made linoleum floors. sink-tops.
and give you a free estimate! DU PONT TONTINE WASHABLE
Linowall. Our ecxperienced representative will call
Linoleum
WINDOW SHADES
Patterson Shade & Floor Covering Co.
113 S. Pennsylvania
Riley 1496
r G0 SWIMMI
Recreation is impor. fant for war workers, Get outside and relax! Transit lines reach all
NG!
saben
4 3 Bri (2 i i 3 ag v
2
5 a ry PIE rm er rN Ear
major pools and parke In the city. Go during aon-rush hours, :
games and lost nine for the second division Mudhens, formerly was with the Boston Red Sox. He has
DIAMOND LOANS a record of 75 strikeouts in 135 in-
WE BUY DIAMONDS oe thls veur HA PACKING
] Sd 1AN K MOVING BLLLUR TEE ETM TIRE cece of righ: hander Tgy Hanlon. Warehouse or sun
riche
Se
REA BEA i
