Newspaper Page Text
.rr(rnSDAY. APRIL 5, 1951.
3ANNER - HERALD
S S
CURTIS DRISKELL, SPORTS EDITOR
Trojan Drills End
\s Whites Win Tilt
Anintra-squad game between the Reds and Whites
wound up spring football practice for the Athens High
Trojans yesterday afternoon as the Whites, favored at the
oot by a touchdown, defeated the Reds, 13-6.
The game climaxed four and a
valf weeks of spring grid prac
i for the locar squad and was
rormed highly successful by Tro
ian mentors Earl Wheby and Way
man Sellers. ¢
An equal division of the squad
«rength was attempted, but due
to reserve line material the White
oleven held a slight advantage
over the opposing Reds. Elmer
Chapman and Johnny Short cap
tained the White group, while the
Reds were led by Jimmy Williams
and Billy McGinnis.
Jerry Price, White left halfback,
and Mack O’Kelley, tackle for the
Whites were featured in the win
ner's scoring roles, with Johnny
Short, Trojan .conversion artist,
contributing the extra point.
Price scored on an eight yard
saunt from his halfback slot, and
O'Kelley, who drew praise from
both Trojan coaches for his alert
play during the game, snagged a
loose ball out of the air to score
on a three-yard move. !
Red Scoring .
Bill Saye scored the Reds tally
on a 60-yard pass from Red quar
terback Garland Sailors. Jimmy
Williams attempted -the extra
point but failed due to a blocked
kick. :
Save was particularly impressive
in his end role as well as a new
found defensive position at guard,
and Sailors saw -action at both
quarterback and fullback for the
Reds yesterday. Sailors, a letter
man at fullback last year, will see
action at both positions this fall.
Sandy Butler, a newcomer to the
squad and termed by Coach Whe
by as one of the most improved
players of the spring practice,
handled the fullback duties for the
Red team.
The line play of both teams was
aggressive and showed improve
ment during the spring drills. Both
lines hit hard and were consistent
in their efforts throughout the
game. Reserve line material was
the difference in the strength of
the two teams which had about
evenly matched backfield selec
tions.
Coach Comments - i
In comments of the results of
the spring drills, Coach Wheby
said following yesterday’s game,
that both he and Coach Sellers
line coach were highly pleased
with the progress that the Trojan
squad has made this sping. He
praised several outstanding mem
bers of the session and named
Johnny Short and Sandy Butler as
the most consistent members
throughout the four week session.
When questioned as to the out
look for next fall, the Trojan head
mentor said that even though the
Trojans will meet one of the
toughest grid@ schedules in the
state next fall, he believes that
they will muster one of the best
first teams that Athens High has
secn in several years.
Lineups:
\!hxtes (13) Reds (6)
Chapman LE Saye
. o — e ' Rl
e . R o d
| T i
% T;‘ ’/’V. ; ,
: 1/ | B
b /,{" ’; /
i ; il f Bl
: N |
' RIDE ON /( e
1 (N
sMOOTH NI RS’
£ ! 2 . \ \ :
FNEW TIRE SAFETY with ¢ )
glN.o . e = L
i v.“g?l‘;‘f bl ! ) L ; ? v . ‘o
Ef':“‘ EIB ER ioRS TR
RN
e PR TR (LT
Why take chancesonsmooth WJDTH
tires when Seiberling Tire B 9 FACTORY e
Treading can give you up Ik R
i to 50% more safe miles. If ~APPROVED 3:1
| : : 3 D A
i g YoU can't efford new tires, ek ol -
i o i S T R
| op and 0?'( us about this s (1] ] P i
} money-saving way to safe 3 SA"SFA(TORY
driving, CHf
L BT
i 7" %0000 000000 ¢ RN
E& S. TIRE SERVICE
O'Kelley LT Marshall
B. Carter X McKinney
Short LG Badley
Davis RG McGinnis
Mitchel RT Stanford
Foss RE Webb
Price LH Williams
Maxwell RH ‘Crane
Hudson QB Sailors
Winfrey FB Butler
Referee — Willie Fowler, Um
pire — James Matthews, Head
Lineman-—David Seagraves, Field
Judge — R. H. Driftmier,
Louis Named
Contender In
Ring Ratings
WASINGTON, April 5—(AP)—
Joe Louis, the aging Brown Bomb
er from Detroit, is back where he
was 14 years ago in the National
Boxing Association ratings.
The 47-state boxing body last
rated the former champion as the
only logical contender for Ezzard
Charles’ heavyweight crown,
This is the same place he stood
in 1937 when Jimmy Braddock
was champion. Louis won the title
that year from Braddock and nev
er moved down in the rankings
until he lost to Charles while try
ing to regain his title, Charles had
won Louis crown in an NBA-re
cognized bout with Joe Walcott
after Louis na& abdicated.
Joe was only an outstanding
boxer in the NBA's last quarterly
rankings. With him then was Lee
Savold.
Now with Louis back in the logi
cal contendcer stot, Savold, Jersey
Joe Walcott and Rex Layne are
listed as outstanding boxers.
Light-heavyweight Harry Mat
thews was moved up from the
second-ranking outstanding boxer
to the No. 2 contender for Joe
Maxim's title. :
The NBA extended recognition
to Maxim as the lightheavy king
but noted his rating was only “con
ditional.”
It said the NBA executive com
mittee will announce shortly, prob
ably next week, whether Maxim
and lightweight champion Ike Wil
liams will be stripped of their
crowns for failure to defend them
within the time allotted by the
NBA last February. Both men
were told then to lay their titles
on the line py March 31, 1951.
The biggest drop in the new
ratings was that of former mid
dleweight king Jake Lamotta, who
lost his crown to Sugar Ray Rob
inson in the past quarter. Lamotta
was dropped from champ to out
standing boxer. He was ranked
along with Dave Sands of Austra
lia and France’s Laurient Dauth
uille.
64 Leading Golfers
Open Masters Play
BY STERLING SLAPPEY
AUGUSTA, Ga., April s.—(AP)—The golfing clan ral
lied here today to watch the opening of the race for 1951’s
first major title —the Masters.
For the next four days 48 prime professionals and 16
amateurs compete against each other as well as against
the Augusta National course, a versatile layout which
makes a golfer stop, look and think before he fires away.
The National is a 6,900-yard
course which many golfers and
course architects consider the fin
est inland layout in the country.
Par is evenly broken between the
nines—36-36—-72.
Who will win this 15th Masters?
The winner probably will be the
guy who shoots a 280 or 281 during
the 72-hole program.
Last year Jimmy Demaret took
the title for the third time and
gave the National another name—
Demaret’s dreamland. Jimmy won
with a 283, but in a way he backed
into the championship.
Jim Ferrier had the Masters just
about sacked and tied until it
slipped out of the bag on the last
six holes when he blew sky high.
Hottest Streak
Now Big Jim Ferrier again is a
pick just as he was before the
final round last April. His is the
hottest streak of golf in many
years. In five tournaments he’s
won three times and finished sec~
ond twice.
And Australia Jim might win
this one. He’s a putter of the
Bobby Jones and Horton Smith
rank and putting is important
here. o
. Defending champions usually get
a lot of notice as the favorite to
repeat. But jovial Jimmy Dema
ret isn’'t getting much this time.
The memory of his poor golf this
winter lingers and his chances of
winning Masters No. 4 are slim.
Amateurs are getting more no
tice than usual in such a fast field
as this. That may be because 16
amateurs are the most ever to play
in a Masters or because the Wal
ker Cup squad is heres with the
exception of Al Mengert and Bud
Holscher.
Sixty-four golfers were ready to
tee off starting at 11 a. m. (EST)
today.
Two Oldtimers
Two oldtimers withdrew before
Kluszewski Powers
Redlegs To Victory
BY RALPH RODEN
Associated Press Sports Writer
Ted (The Brute) Kluszewski, 26-year-old first baseman
of the Cincinnati Reds, is going to be a tough customer in
the clutch this season if his Grapefruit League bombing is
any criterion.
- The former star end at the Uni
versity of-Indiana-drove in all of
Cincinnati's runs yesterday as the
‘Reds defeated Washington, 3-0, at
Orlando, Fla.
Kluszewski doubled with the
bases loaded in the third inning off
lefty Bob Kuzava, and veteran
Ken Raffensberger made the
markers stand up as he blanked
the Nats on five hits. Raffensber
ger is the first Cincinnati pitcher
to go the route this spring.
Better In Field
Besides his sensational hitting,
Kluszewski has improved greatly
as a fielder. The strapping 230-
pound, six-foot-two giant has been
working qvertime to perfect his
fielding.
The New York Yankees, mean
while, outlasted El Paso of the
Southwest International League,
16-10, in the Texas city. Hank
Bauer blasted two home runs and
Mickey Mantle, Yogi Berra, Cliff
Mapes and Joe Dimaggio one
apiece to lead the bombers’ as
sault.
The Chicago White Sox edged
the Pittsburgh Pirates, 9-8. in ten
innings at New Orleans. The Sox
tied the score on Jlm Busby’s hom
er in the ninth and won out in the
tenth.
Four Homers
Four home runs enabled the.
Jacksonville Tars of the South At
lantic League to nip the Boston
Red Sox, 8-7, at Jackosnville, Fla.
Third baseman Rance Pless de
livered the playoff blow, a 400-
foot homer in the last of the ninth.
The New York Giants came from |
behind and tied the Boston Braves,
5-5, at Beaumont, Tex. l
Home runs by Hank Sauer and
Ransom Jackson plus wildness b_vl
Al Papai enabled the Chicago Cubs
to defeat the Houston (TL) Buffs,
7-4, in a night game at Houston.
Other arc lieht action saw
Brooklyn score three runs in Ihe|
11th inning to defeat the Phila-!
delphia Phillies, 5-4; the Philadel- |
phia Athletics edge Birmingham |
(SA), 6-5, and the St. Louis
Browns rip their San Antonio
farm club (TL), 13-5. i
Fights |ast Nite
By The Associated Press
ST. LOUlS.—Wesbury Bascom,
1761, St. L.ouis, outpointed Vern
Mitchell, 196, Detroit, 10.
ELIZABETH, N. J. — %Vincent
Martinez, 148, Paterson, stopped
Johnny “Red” De Fazio, 150, Bay
onne, 6.
FOR THE BEST IN e
; AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE ’,5
ALWAYS COME TO
E *
L pesoto SILVEY'S riymourn B
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Champion List
Among Masters
AUGUSTA, Ga., April s—Past
winners of the 14 Masters Tourna
ments, the years they won, and
their 72-hole scores:
1934—Horton Smith, 284.
1935—Gene Sarazen, 282,
1936—Horton Smith, 285.
1937—Byron Nelson, 283,
1938—Henry Picard, 285.
1939—Ralph Guldahl, 279.
1940—Jimmy Demaret, 280.
1941—Craig Wood, 280.
1942—Byron Nelson, 280.
1943-4-45-—No tournaments be
cause of war.
1946—Herman Keiser, 282,
1947—Jimmy Demaret, 281.
1948—Claude Harmon, 279.
1949—Sam Snead, 282.
1950—Jimmy Demaret, 2883.
the tournament began. Henry Pi
card, the “Hershey Kid” of the
1930’5, withdrew because a
strained muscle in his left side has
not healed. Picard won here in
1938.
Big Ed Dudley;, base voiced ma
jor domo of the Masters, found he
could not compete and act as host
pro at the same time. Ed is head
professional at the National
Course.
Sentimental backing goes
strongly to Ben Hogan and Byron
Nelson, and either could win. Ho
gan won the National Open last
summer at Merion and Nelson won
the Bing Crosby in California in
January.
Whether Sam Snead, the 1949
Masters winner, has recovered
from & chipped bone in his left
hand remains to be seen. If he
has, Sammy should rank well up
as a potential champion.
GRAPEFRUIT LOOP
Lipon Well On Way
Toward Good Year
LAKELAND, Fla., April 5.— (AP) —lt could be that
Johnny Lipon has the desirable answer to the question
whether he can do it‘again t}}is L
The Detroit Tiger shortstop was]
a sensation last season with his‘
hitting—well above all his previ
ous performances.
Right now Lipon is Detroit's
leading hitter. He has a .351 aver
age for the spring exhibition
games. ‘
SAVANNAH, Ga., April 5 —
(AP)—The northward bound Bos
ton Red Sox who absorbed an 8-7
loss in Jacksonville, Fla. yester
day, will try it again today against
another member of the Class A
Sally League. -
They will piay the Savannah
club here today with lefty Maurice
McDermott .getting. the .Boston
pitching assignment.
Tomorrow the American Leag- |
uers will play Augusta of the same
league, in the laiter’s park a few
miles up the Savannah river.
First baseman Walt Dropo and
pitcher Walt Masterson who were
in Boston for medical checkups are
due to join the club in Augusta.
Dropo has a hairline fracture of a
wrist bone and Masterson has had |
a glandular infection. |
CORPUS CHRIST, Tex., April 5
—(AP)—Fred Marsh, 27-year-old
infielder joined the St. Louis
Browns yesterday, anxious to |
prove he is ready for major league
competition. i
Although one game isn’t a real |
test, manager Jack Tavlor wasf
happy at what he saw last night. |
Marsh made a leaping one-handed
catch to start a triple play and
looked good at the plate.
Marsh came to the Browns in a
trade with the Cleveland Indians. |
NEW ORLEANS, La.. April 5—
(AP) — Omar ‘Turk” Lown, 23-,
year-old draftee from Mantreal, |
so far is providing a big lift to the |
Chicaen Cnhs’ pitching staff—and '
it needed it. "
Lown allowéd only one run and |
two hits in his last 10 innings'
aeainet the New York Yankees and
Pirates,
“His fast ball is always doing
something,” Catcher Rube Walker
said. “That third sirike he threw |
past Phil Rizzuto the other day |
“Y” Completes
Softball Loop
Organization
Teams have been chosen for ac
tion in the newly formed Midget-
Intermediate Softball League at
Athens Y. M. C. A, play begins on
Monday according to Cobern Kel
ley, physical director,
The team members are:
Monkeys—Captain Dan Mat
thews, Willie Fowler, Bryson Tan
ner, Joe Tarpley, Johnny Fortson,
David Garrison, David Nichols,
Ray Coile, Hugh Ingiis, Hugh
Tankersly, Owen Quattlebaum.
Hillbillys—Captain Don Hender=
son, Jimmy Mercer, Sanford But
ler, Fred Nash, Billy Wiison, Jim
Hadaway, Carlton James, Billy
Howell, Warren Lanier, Billy Sea~
bolt, John Wilkins, David Thur
mond.
Tin-horns—Captain Don Terry,
Jimmy Williams, Mack O’Kelley,
Squeaky Simpson, Herb Abroms,
Donald Bell, Ronnie McKinney,
Louis Smith, Emmet Bondurant,
Howard Dpyrdahl, Teddy Crowe,
David Woodall.
Buckaroos — Captain Tommy
Blakely, Donald Epps, Winston
Wiggins, Billy Slaughter, Bobby
Matthews, Bobby Duncan, Donald
Cofer, Herman Nash, Boozie New
ton, Jackie Burke, George Bray.
Tigers—Captain Buddy Griffeth,
Dick Carteaux, R. H. Driftmier,
Fain Slaughter, Ernest Brackett,
Ben Price, Tot Morton, Bobby
Towns, Harry Saye, Sonny Dillard,
Rhett Tanner, Bobby Thl.ompson,
Yardbirds—Captain Bobby Yar
brough, Fred Leathers, Lou Lan
ard, Ronnie Griffeth, George Up
church, Jimmy Delk, Valdon
Smith, Bippy Watson, Jerry Hill,
Silas Read, Henry Marshall.
Jack Rabbits—Captain Jimbo
Laßoon, Jimmy Maxwell, Billy
McGinnis, Bobby Marbut, Chester
Leathers, Allan Barber, David
Bell, Westy Westervelt, Johnny
Mitchell, Fred Newburn, George
Ramsey.
Sluggers—Captain Ed Hanson,
Sonny Suddath, Jerry Price, Ralph
Tolbert, Fred Loef, Brad Foss,
Donald Tolbert, Rolyn Massey,
Caesar Jackson, Bob Doster, Duane
Hall.
Scores in yesterday’s Indian
games: Redskins and Elks, 8-8
(Jimmy Gabrlelson got two hom
ers in two at bats for the Elks);
Eagles 12, Buckeyes 10 (Ray Dan
ner hit four for four for the
Eagles); Bombers and Muleheads
tied, 11-11 (Virgil Webb collected
three hits in three times at bat for
the Muleheads).
Tomorrow’s Indian games: Red
skins vs. Bombers, Muleheads vs.
Elks, Jets vs. Baboons. Buckeyes
and Eagles stay inside for gym ac
tion.
BANTA AILING -
SAVANNAH, Ga., April § —
(AP) — Jack Banta, Brooklyn
right-hander, wil miss the open
ing games of the major league sea
son. He’s been ordered to rest for
a month. The twirler has had arm
trouble all spring.
l was the hardest ball I ever
| caught.” :
SHREVEPORT, La., April 5 —
(AP)—Hustling Jim Busby, Chi
cago White Sox outfielder, is well
on the way to nailing down a start
ing assignment.
The rookie, who hit .310 for Sa
cramento in the Pacific Coast
League last season, collected three
blows—one a game-tying homer in
the ninth—as the Sox downed the
Pittsburgh Pirates 9-8 in 10 in
nings. yesterday.
Busby tops the club in base
stealing: seven thefts in eight at
tempts.
.BIRMINGHAM, Ala., April 5—
(AP)—The Philadelphia Athletics
take a day off from exhibition
playing today and spend 24 hours
here before leaving for Savannah,
Ga., where they meet their South
Atlantic League farmhands tomor
row night,
Manager Jimmy Dykes' squad
zot off to a quick start yesterday,
driving across six runs in the first
three innings to edge the Birming
ham Barons, 6-5.
Joe Coleman missed the game
because of a bronchial condition.
He is expected to be back in action
again soon.
A COUPLE OF BROTHER ACTS
NEW YORK— (AP) — Martin
and Bob Biles of California and
Bob and Ross Hume of Michigan
are the only brothers to have won
NCAA track titles. The Cochran
brothers of Mississippi A&M and
Indiana came close to duplicating
this feat. C. S. Cochran won the
440 in 1922 and 1923. Brother Roy
wag a close second in the 1941 low
hurdles for Indiana.
A STONE'S THROW
ST. LOUIS — (AP) — Charles
(Chuck) Diering, outfielder for the
St. Louis Cardinals, is a native St.
Louisan. He attended Beaumont
High School which is ony a stone’s
throw from Sportsman’s Park, the
home field for the Redbirds.
KISSES WAY TO JAIL
HAMBURG. Germany— (AP)
--A police official was sentenced
to four weeksg imnrisonment here
becsuse “kissing does not be'ong
to the sphere of duty of a police
man.” The of \~ial had interview
ed a housemaid-on the suspicious
action of one of the borJers, When
the interview was . firished he
threw her on the couch and Kkiss
ed her.
“I had closed my notebook and
so my duty was finiched,” the
yoime policeman told the judge.
The m:id dil not rntify the
nroszculos. bher fiance did.
[Bulldogs Win In 4-3
Thriller; Vols Invade
BY CURTIS DRISKELL
Banner-Herald Sports Editor
Coach Nolen Richardson and his Georgia baseball team
checked over the defensive lines of their Ag Hill strong
hold today, and began preparations for the invasion by
another Southeastern Conference foe.
After a succesgful three-game stand against Kentucky
and Presbyterian College, the Bulldogs entertain Tennes
see Friday and Saturday,
Game time Friday is 3:30 p. m.,
and the Saturday game starts at
3 p. m
Shortstop Jim Umbricht’s time
ly three-base hit brought home
the winning run in the bottom of
the tenth inning yesterday to
break up an airtight pitching duel
and turn back Presbyterian Col
lege, 4-3. It was Georgia's third
victory in two days.
Umbricht rapped the ball sharp
ly along the right-field foul line
on the hit-and-run sign, with one
away. Speedy Jackie Roberts
flashed around the base paths and
came home standing up for the
winning marker.
Lefty Dick Dozier, the Bulldogs’
pickoff artist, was the winning
pitcher. He relieved Athens south
G R so Spri
:ea d rI P ;
s ED M?fi@-ggr" N! q\ R
; \ 4 AN el - A :
M " S
</ TN / nh "Bel 1l 7
=) vt
L e / Zl':'..."“ SNV ‘ ‘ ;
" G [ ’
' As / C _‘,/’;._6-4'/ _—— 7ST :
W e e } Nothing to Buy--
; Pl > AN,
B, < éAT SN’ Lot
iy R £ RN %
P, - o CNEER S M A
(- R
" , - VAR eE R
e = A,
Py %ROS Ts g R 'wé} % r;’ } d:.;d_"ll "?\ '\‘\?‘Q
gl New 1951 Tirestont Cr:uisor ' . 0/,"’,:‘\\32
Bt ARR 5 00 One Year's %1
> one Yoot e JBURP.EE'S
R (&W ~_ )\ cudedinthePu- ] Hybrid Glant
'-\.\J/A\\' O\ """ fZINNIAS
%\\?:‘v [&\\/ LOW AS & Dew't Miss this Offer ...
DG K $ 00 They're the New Glonst
. & ) A 1 Zienias that Grew
© pmisToNs BICYQE A 957 AN wax .§O GE .
«“ Low As ot sil QET YOURS TODAYY
§ AR
\\
- - WY
; ‘\';! - AY
ROLLER SKATES
e Adjustable ~ NOW CNLY
o Rubber cushioned
i Leather straps $3 '?_2
HEY KIDS, LOOK! 2 ®
. Hillerich & Bradsby f/‘" ®
BASEBAI.I. &
. BAT £ .
4 2
$ 1 135 @ -
special S
4 : H:::::i'de Cover ®
: 4 BASEBAI.L :
LA om¥. 98c .
Cut Your lawn o J/ . 3
the Modern // 1
Way .. . with A ‘ j
Electricity! ° 7\M
Pay Asaitae As // / ;‘
2 w?zx ; /// 3
12-INCH ELECTRIC “HUFFY” MOWER
® Lightweight — A Child ® Safer—Blades Guarded
Can Cperate It Both Front and Rear
® Starts Instaniiy—Quiet e Cutting Height Adjust
® '3 H.P. Electric Motor able from 1 o 3 Inches
® Underwriters Listed i
Ernest (. Crymes Co.
164 East Clayton
paw John Marshall in the ninth
with none out, when Marshall
tired after eight innings of brill
iant hurling. ’
Fans 13
Bobby Edwards, a fine right
hander, took the loss — Presbyte
rian’s first defeat of the season—
and gave up_eight hits to the Bull
days. Marshall allowed nine hits,
and Dozier was touched for one
safety. Edwards threw third
strikes past 13 batsmen, while
Marshall and Dozer fanned three
each.
Presbyterian scored first, reach
ing Marshall for a pair of runs in
the second inning. After that, the
tall Athens southpaw .was tough
as rawhide and stingy with base
hits. He seemed to tire in the
SEE THESE LAWN
AND GARDEN VALUES!
_ 25 Ft. Standard
. Garden Hose 3.25 :
& 50 Ft. Standard ]
~ Carden Hose 5.95
. 25 Ft. - 10 Year
. Garden Hose 4.95
. 50 Ft, - 10 Year *
. Garden Hose 8.95
f’;& ~ ‘ -
TR
“The Clinch’ 3-Finger '
FIELDER'S GLOVE
+ Sel d
. cowhide ONLY 7.95
PAGE SEVEN
ninth inning, however, and l2t in
the tying run before Richardson
sent Dozer to his aid.
Three For Four
Roberts banged out two doubles
and a single in four trips to top
all batsmen. Nathan Williams col
lected two for five for Georgia.
Don Hattaway, Presbyterian third
sacker, rapped three for three for
the losers.
Sonny Shealey is Coach Rich
ardson’s choice to face Tennessee
in the first game of the series Fri
day. Georgia’s Saturday starter
has not been named, but Chicka
mauga Captain Charley Kell may
be the man. '
First yacht elub in America was
ororganized at Poughkeepsie, N.
Y., in 1861, and held regattas and
races on the Hudson River.
The champion among the 1950
two-year-old fillies was Uunt Jin
ny. She is one of the four fillies
named for the 1951 Kentucky
Derby.
RSP RSR Na,
e
! ‘ \\,; -Ql
,’A'.: ] \_;:/i \
@)
Now .. .an Afford
. PLASTIC GARDEN HOSE
© 25-Feet ]
Ny .. $3 95
GARDEN
; TOOL
‘ M \ RACK
AL =
: M Hend Tool Sot
| W Culsivater
, ALL FOR OMLY 57c
5 e it ANDIRMANIAEAIE « . pa |
rmas rai e
o D
i o Il SRS
G i N
el N
i "{% R I i
' A();wi"—-kfiw
RIS Y
For Easier Cutting!
You Can’t Beat This
PAY ONLY
A
WEEK
¢ Full Size 16" Cuiling Width
o 10-in. Wheels, Rubber Tires
Phone 2726