The Key West Citizen Newspaper, October 15, 1953, Page 6

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Barefoot League Tilt Set At Wickers Field Tonight [ Pege 6 Sonar School Student Wins USO Table Tennis Tourney THE KEY WEST CITI Joe Niedzielski, SA, Fleet Son- | ar School, downed Michael V. ZEN Thursday, October 15, 1953 Gilmore, 3; N. E. Westfall, YN2, Fleet Sonar Schodl, 2; Michael Gamble Hurls One-Hitter In VX-1 SOFTBALLERS WHIP SONAR SCHOOL | Notre Dame Victory Over Pitt Action in the Quarterback Club/sity will coach and officiate for the. 5 Armando Boan G| Shea, TE3, USS Bushnell, 21-12 | V. Shea, TE3 USS Bushnell, 1; i i ind 21-16, to win first place in | J. C. Naylor, AT2, HS-1, 1; A. J. } Ci Le | e e sponsored Barefoot League will re- teams tonight. 7 John Irving a , to | ‘ | 2, 3. i ity ague ” r ‘ Yesterday r the table tennis handicap tourna- | Ketcham, AN, HS-1, 3; Harvey e a sume fosight in the Wishes Field os dctemsive. plot, tan tale ane ment at the USO-YMCS Club | Resnick, AN, HS-1, 3; Lloyd | Seen; WIC yan Stadium when the Blue Devils op- pose the Golden Rams in a game slated to get underway at 7 p. m. The public is invited to attend free of charge. The Blue Devils captured a hard- two elevens perfectly matched. | 4 The game was played pretty 31 |much in the center of the field 32 with neither team able to get a 20 prolonged match going, 22 The Blue Devils, however, got a'19 55 yard march underway in the 31 Billy Rohas ! Tuesday night. T. &. Branch, SO1, Fleet Sonar | School, beat K. E. Saelens, ET3, | USS PC 580, 50-27, in the handi- cap pool tournament finals. The table tennis “ladder” tour- | mament and pool handicap list- Zwally, FA, $;. | USS Bushnell, .98; A. Cassone, | CS1, USS Gilmore, .92; Robert Roland, SN, Fleet Sonar School, Behind the one hit pitching of E. W. Bohm, ME1, USS Gil- \Dave Gamble, the VX-1 Flyers de-! I r more, .99; G. L. Link SN, Fleet feated the Fleet Sonar School, 4-1, NEW YORK w—The past week Vard, Colgate over Dartmouth, Sonar School, .99; Fisher, ETSA, |in the first game of, a scheduled has been spent in conjuring up | softball doubleheader at Bayview *, double, extra-special, peachy \Park last night. The lone hit off By HAROLD CLAASEN whammy to neutralize the .upset fever which threatened the football Jover Cornell, Columbia over Har- Ohio State over Pennsylvania, Navy over Princeton, Penn State over Syracuse, Bucknell over Tem- ple, Boston University over Bran- fought 7-0 decision yesterday after-|¢),;, i a : yj 91; Lopen, SN, USS Bushnell, |Gamble was a second inning hom- schedule last week. The whammy |deis. Boon over the Bed Raiders on signe ne ier a ser RAMS ; ings for the top ten are: ut, | SU: K- E. Saelens, ET3 USS ler by Fozzini, Fleet Sonar left was brewing in time to bring in] South: Florida ae Citadel, single touchdown late in the! They drove down to the Red No. Player— | Table Tennis: L. E. Carr, | PCs80, 90; R. J. Marucci, SN, | fielder, \36 correct picks and nine incorrect |Georgia Tech over Auburn, Missis- =| USS Chivo, 8 points; Charles | Raider 30 yard line with Solomon, 41 John Bigler USS Gilmore, 90; A. F Brooks, | py.) McGrew, Sonar hurler, lim. €S 2 week ago. That's an aver-|sippi over Tulane, Virginia Mili- Last meeting of the Blues and the Golden Rams resulted in a 66 deadlock. All games in the league have Proven to be close contests. Coach Ray Blais has his youngsters train- ed down to a fine edge. They are) members of the 8th and 9th grades at the Key West High School. They wear regulation football uniforms except for sneakers in- stead of cleats. The Quarterback Club has pitched in to equip them. Members of the Key West var- Doug Allen and Dorris Yates doing 47 most of the ball carrying. “4 From there they used a double 48 Pitchout play which went from 46 |Yates to Solomon to Allen for the 51 touchdown. Yates bulled through 37 ithe line for the extra point. ik Larry Mickler and Jimmy Jen- 45 Louis Barroso Raymond Camalier George Roberts Frederick Case ... Rafael Bancells ... G rT E | Leo Castro “HB Paul Higgs FB| Harold Cates QB) the losers. Tonight's rosters: BLUE DEVILS No, Player— 27 Ramon Lewis 18 Douglas Allen Pos. |sen were defensive standouts for 3g | Richard Scott Donald Cole |34 Allen Lopez .. 39 Ernest Knowles 50 Robert McKinney Charles Walston ...... 36 Charlie Dressen Balks At Signing One Year Brooklyn Pact; Pee Wee Reese May Get Job By JOE REICHLER BROOKLYN (#—Charlie Dressen still insisting today he will not re- turn as Brooklyn manager for any- thing less than a two-year term, may be succeeded by Dodger Cap- tain Pee Wee Reese. Reese, a favorite of Brooklyn President Walter O'Malley and long regarded as a possible future successor to Dressen, indicated strongly he would be receptive if| the job were offered him. “I always said before that J wouldn’t consider a manager's job|ing while I still have some good play- ing years left,” said the 34-year-| old star shortstop. “But now this, thing .. . I don’t know . . . Things Reese expressed: curprise at the ousting of Dressen yesterday. “I never imagined anything like this would happen,” he said. “I | don't waht to say anything right now that might be misconstrued. “Charlie is a great manager and .. I hope he comes back next year.” Asked point blank whether he ar considering “Reese, O’Malley at’s something we'll discuss in a week or so, Right now we're going to give Dressen a week to think it over. That’s the agree- ment we made yesterday. He might change his mind. At least I hope so.” . Meanwhile, Dressen seemed to be going around in circles, just! about as much as the baseball public, which was startled by the announcement yesterday that the two-time pennant-wioning manager had split with the Dodgers because of a disagreement in the length of the contract. Dressen, flushed with two straight National League cham- Pionships, had demanded a three- year contract for $50,000 per sea- son. O'Malley rejected it and coun- tered with an offer of a one-year '$35,000 to $42,500. Dressen refused jit and attempted to compromise for a two-year contract at O’Mal- ley’s figure. He promised to give O'Malley hi: California home next Monday. Asked to pose for a picture de- picting him waving farewell to Eb- bets Field, Dressen declined, say- “I might be back next year. I might change my mind.” Later when’ the same photog- rapher bade him goodby and ex- pressed the hope that he might eee him again, Charlie smiled and sald: “You might see me in Baltimore + «. if you ever get down there.” In Baltimore, Clyde Y. Morris, secretary-treasure of the Orioles, said his club would be “very in- terested” in talking with Dressen But he added: “The position we are trying to fill is that of general manager of the club. If Mr. Dressen is talking about a field manager that is a subject we will discuss only after we have a general manager.” Marty Marion, who managed the club when it was in St. Louis last season, still has another year to go on his three-year contract. The Orioles already have taken over the obligation to pay the final third of Rogers Hornsby’s three- year contract. Hornsby managed the Browns prior to Marion. Should the Browns bring in a new man- ager, they would have to pay three pilots, two for not managing. That, incidentally, is the reason for O'Malley’s insistence on a one- year contract. pact at an increase in salary from} final answer before he left for his} “T realize other clubs are sign- jing their managers to two and |three-year contracts,” said O’Mal- ley. “I am a firm disbeliever of; \long-term contracts. The Brooklyn club has paid more managers jmore money for not managing than any team in major league istory. I was a stockholder in ie club when we paid Casey Sten- gel, Burleigh Grimes and Leo |Durocher for not managing the |Dodgers. As long as I am the head of this organization, it will never happen again.” Dressen, plainly bitter at what he considered unfair treatment, said: “Why should I sign for anything less than a two-year term? All my friends tell me I'm crazy to sign a one-year contract. They point out that practically every other manager has a two or three- year contract. Look at Stanky and Grimm and Durocher and Bou- dreau. Leo took a contender and brought it in fifth and was re- warded with a two-year contract. |Stanky got three years for finish- jing third. Boudreau got three for \finishing fourth. I win two pen- ants, something no other manager ever did in Brooklyn, and they want to give me one year. I’m not gonna do it.” Another factor that prompted Dressen to hold out for a longer contract his wife, now hospital- ized with an abdominal disorder. She insisted he sign for two years or more. She even helped him draft a letter on the matter to O'Malley. The letter was so strongly word- ed, O'Malley said, that he would not divulge the coatents. He said it would be best if he handed it jback to Dressen with the sugges- tion to forget he ever wrote it. Earl Sande Has First Winner Since 32 Wed. By JOHN CHANDLER NEW YORK # — Jockey Earl Sande had his first winner since 1932 today, and he was as happy as when he won three Kentucky Derbies in the days when he was the toast of the American turf. The 54-year-old rider, wao began & comeback Oct. 5 because he| “ran out of eating money,” won the seventh race yesterday at Jamaica, scoring with the 12-1 shot Miss Weesie over the 8-10 favor- ite, Will Be There, ridden by Ed- die Arcaro, “I wish everyone in the worl was as happy as I am right now,” said Sande as he brushed away a tear and smiled to the crowd jam- ming around the winner's circle Since his comeback, Sande h: ridden eight horses before today. He finished third with Honest Bread at Belmont Oct. 5, his first Tace in 21 years. Honest Bread was the second choice in the third race yesterday, but Sande was beaten by a nose at the wire by White Hart. He cried a bit then, and said: “Once I get one (a winner) I'll lose some of this nervous tension. It makes me over anxious and I {and Will Be There near the head of the stretch. “Come on, Sande,” the crowd yelled—the same old cry that went jup in the Golden Twenties when jthe Earl was booting them home in most of the major stake races in this country, Miss Weesie was still third an jeighth of a mile from the finish, jthen Sande made his bid and at ithe sixteenth pole the crowd sense that this was it. The time for the six furlongs was 1:13 1-5 and the winner, owned T. F. White, paid $27.10, “She's a sweetheart,” Sande said later. “I felt like this was the triple crown all rolled up into one, and that I won it.” Kentucky Aims To Stop Parker LEXINGTON, Ky. (—Kentucky offers its revitalized football punch jaS_& counter measure to highly |beaten Mississippi State in a South- eastern Conference clash here Sat- talented Jackie Parker and un-| 'Bucceroni Wants Title Fight Soon ST. LOUIS #—Dan Bucceroni, a rough, free-swinging bout with rapid-fire Jimmy Slade behind ‘him, now is looking forward with |keener ambition to a possible first- champion Rocky Marciano. Is the Philadelphia butcher boy, who had to scrap to win a unani- mous 10-round decision over Slade |last night at the St. Louis Arena, jready for Rocky? “Yeah!” says Danny. Marciano, at ringside during the nationally televised bout while; |waiting to referee a co-feature 10- round match, said he thinks Buc-; jceroni probably will be his next/ Stuart, SN, US Nav. Sta., 4; Joe Niedzielski, SA, Fleet Sonar School, 6; D. R. Nibbe, SN, USS ENFN, USS Gilmore, 90; H. M. | Ungerman, EMFN, USS Gliome e Turpin Drills By JACK HAND GROSSINGERS, N. Y. ® — A carload of boxing writers cautious- ly sneaked up on the training home of Britain's Randy Turpin. They wanted to make sure Randy wouldn’t head for the hills. He was supposed to be allergic to news- papermen, Out front of Turpin's cottage was a sign: “Randy Turpin’s Training Quarters.” The other day a British writer, with a crayon made it read “Non-Training” quazters. But that had been erased. Last time Turpin was in Ameri- ca for his second fight with Sugar Ray Robinson—the time he lost the middleweight title to the man he had upset in London—he was a training demon. He thought nothing of buzzing through 15-round workouts. American trainers raised their hands in horror. Nobody ever trains more than five or six rounds over here. This was a new Turpin, who boxed Monday, rested Tuesday and Wednesday, boxed Thursday and then wasn’t sure when he would work again. In three weeks he worked only 21 rounds. Counting ‘the British workouts he had boxed a total of only 58 rounds. Why this about face? What had happened? Turpin tried to give the answer as he spoke to the writers on the lawn in front of his cottage. “TI just don’t feel like a lot of boxing,” he said. “‘No use doing it now and going over the top too soon.” What about these stories that Turpin, irked at the press, talked of packing his bag and going home? “I'm not happy,” he said. “But it’s nobody’s fault but mine. They do everything for me here. Maybe I’m a little homesick. I don’t know why. When I’m in England, I’m never home, “TI didn’t say I was going home. I said that if I was pushed around like I was last time (1951) I might go home. Nobody is pushimg me this time.” Turpin said he had never seen Bobo Olson, his opponent Oct. 21 for the world middleweight tiele at Madison Squarc Garden. But he insisted he rated him as tough as Robinson. “He’s the best over here, isn’t he?” he asked. “If I win from him, the Amer- icans surely will have to call me world champion. I’m just as strong | just as fast, punch as hard and take just as good a punch as I did two years ago. I'm only a pound and a half over the weight. T'll make it easy.” High Court Has Baseball Suit WASHINGTON # — A prime today is: Has baseball in the past of-the-year fight with heavyweight/30 years become involved in inter- around good during a World Se- state commerce within the mean- ing of the anti-trust laws? If the cor Says no, organized baseball will"go on generally mak- ing its own rules as it has since the days of Abner Doubleday. If the court says yes, baseball is in interstate commerce, three cases appealed to it will be or- dered to trial in federal district courts. The supreme court took the mat- ter under advisement yesterday after two days of hearings. A deci- Tennessee, "Bama Clash Set Saturday By BOB HOOBING NEW YORK \--The Alabama- Tennessee game, traditional bat- jtle of Dixie’s finest, is expected to give a nationwide television au- dience a glimpse of the blood and thunder football for which the ser- ies is famous. Saturday’s 36th meeting of these bitter rivals may not live up to previous clashes between the two. Tennessee has won only one of three games and Alabama is off to a slow start. But its deep-rooted history always seems to fire its perucipante for a dynamic strug- gle. Alabama, with sophomore quar- terback Bart Starr’s passing im- Proving steadily, is a 13-point fa- vorite in the latest edition of the series which his team leads 17 to 14. Four games have ended in ties. Harvie Robinson hopes his first year facing Alabama as Tennes- see’s head coach wor’t be as un- successful as his first year as a Vol player back in 1930. Alabama won that bone-crusher 18-6 to snap a Tennessee defeatless string at 33 games. Alabama stands tc gain or lose the most in the game this year because it still is undefeated in |Southern Conference play. How- ever, it isn’t any consolation to the Tidemen that the series is a grave- yard of the favorite’s aspirations. The blockbusting trio of George Cafego, Len Coffman and Bobby Foxx operating behind a line spearheaded by the great Bob ;Suffridge and Ed Molinski gave Tennessee a 13-0 upset triumph in 1938, It was Alabama’s first SEC loss in three years—ending a 21- game unbeaten skein. Alabama came up with some joutstanding line play too. The Tide forwards held a good Tennessee jteam to 19 yards rushing in °45 while the pinpoint passing of ban- tam Harry Gilmer carried the day, |25-7. The game is one of personal tri- \umphs too. Andy Kozar, subbing for the injured Dick Ernsberger, |bent and broke the ‘Bama line \for two touchdowns—the last with just two minutes remaining—to give the Vols a 14-9 victory before 50,000 limp onlookers at Knoxville in 1950. Jimmy Wade, once stand-in now a regular, is the hope of Tennessee fans to lead an upset bid this year. \ Sports Roundup By GAYLE TALBOT NEW YORK W#—One of base- ball’s perennial arguments con- cerns the supposed ‘edge’ that a southpaw pitcher has going for him when he faces a left-handed batter, and, conversely, the right- handed pitcher when he winds up |question before the Supreme Court! against a righty hitter. | This one never fails to get batted Ties, especially, because that is ‘when a couple of managers are having theis tactics studied and \dissected by millions of experts. We have heard a well-known Manager declare scornfully that the left-handed hitter’s failure to jclout a left-handed pitcher was Purely a mental condition—that such a hitter had been told at ‘an early age he could expect to find the lefties tough. This manager was sore at the time because his jlineup was loaded with left-hand ited the Flyers to only three hits, but his wildness plus some loose fielding by his teammates cost him the game. McGrew Zanned eleven and walked seven in taking the loss. VX-1 took a 3-1 lead in the third without the aid of a hit. Three walks, an error, a fielder’s choice and a wild pitch provided the tal- lies. Tom Fink’s single, a walk, and an error netted the Flyers their final tally in the fourth. | In pitching one of his finest game of the season, Gamble faced ‘only 22 men. Not a man reached |first after Faxxini homered as he |retired the next 17 men in order.! {Only three balls were hit off the big righ hander in the outfield. Score: 'VX-1 003 100 0 4-3-0 FSS 010 000 0 1-1-3 Gamble and Boutot McGrew and Giese In the nightcap, Buck Sawyer’s ilong fly scored Claude Valdez from jthird base to give the Dairy Queen a 3-2 victory over General Electric. The loss through General Electric into a tie for first place with VX-1. General Electric drew first blood when .Lucy Gonzalez led off by! |drawing a walk. After advancing} to second on a passed ball, he scored moments later on two in- field outs. The Dairy Queen boun- ced back in their half of the first with two runs on an error. Al Pa- zo's triple, and an infield out. Mickey Wertz, big General Elec- tric, first baseman, led off the fifth with a tremendous homer to deep center. It was the first hit off Valdez, and tied the score at two jal. The Dairy Queen started their, winning rally in the bottom of the seventh when Valdez opened with a single. After Bobby Lastres bunt- ed safely, Tito Angueria walked to fill the bases. Lee Griffin fanned, but Sawyer flied to center with |Valdez scoring the winning run af- | ter the catch. | Valdez, who yielded three hits, | jstruck out seven and walked three} to notch his first win. Score: DAIRY QUEEN 200 000 1 3-4-0) DAIRY QUEEN 200 000 1 3-60 E 200 000 1 3-6-0 Warren- Walker (5) and Sands C. Valdez and Lewis my men he wasn’t playing because we were facing a left-handed pitch- | er he yelled all over the place. He| |said he could hit any kind of pitch- | ling and that his average proved | jit. When I showed him the fig- jures he wouldn’t believe it at first. | |As I recall, they showed he was j@ .340 hitter against right-handers| and a .270 hitter against lefties. | \His case was about typical too. | “After I knew for sure I fol-| jlowed the information right out the window, not only juggling my line- | up to take advantage of it but Totating my pitchers as best I could to face the clubs they fig-| ured to have the best chance] against. I didn’t win any pennants but if you'll look it up you'll find| we were the only club to break’ jeven on the season with two Yan- age of .800. The season’s record is 123 cor- Tect, 36 incorrect for .769. | Here are this week’s picks: Notre Dame over Pittsburgh: Pitt has come a long way since jthe loss to West Virginia but the Panthers would need a year’s time to get into Notre Dame's class. Alabama over Tennessee: Your TV morsel of the day. Tennessee’s | offense has been below par all sea- son while Alabamz’s has been overhauled since t.at surprise set- back by Mississippi Southern. Minnesota over inois: Illinois spilled Ohio State last Saturday in one of the day’s major upsets. Lightning can’t strike twice in the same spot, they say, and so the) Gophers are the choice. Michigan State over Indiana: If it isn’t Evan Sloac, it is Leroy Bolden; if it isn’t Bolden it is Tommy Yewic; and if it isn’t Yew- ic it is anyone of a dozen other backs who are scoring for the Spartans. Duke over Army: The Southern- ers’ line, from tackle to tackle, probably is as good as any in the country. Southern Californias over Ore- gon: The Oregon Ducks pay the penalty for being the next foe after the Trojans were held to a tie by Washington. Maryland over North Carolina: Two unbeaten powers but Mary- land’s magnificient horde of backs gives it the edge. Skipping over the others in a Urry : FRIDAY NIGHT Brigham Young over Utah State, Villanova over Detroit, West Vir- ginia over George Washington, Fordham over Boston College. SATURDAY East: Rutgers over Brown, Yale 7 jtary over Virginia, Wake Forest over North Carolina State, Missis- sippi State over Kentucky, LSU ia, Presbyterian over ington & Lee over \Richmond, William & Mary over |Virginia Tech. Midwest: Wisconsin over Pur due, Michigan over Northwestern, \lowa over Wyoming, Nebraska over Miami (Fla.), Missouri over jIowa State, Colorado over Kansas State, Oklahoma over Kansas, Wichita over Drake, Tulsa over Hardin-Simmons. Southwest: Texas Christian over Texas A & M, Rice over Southern Methodist, Baylor over Vanderbilt, |Texas Tech over College ef the Pacific, Texas over Arkansas. Far West: Washington State jover Idaho, UCLA over Stanford, ‘Utah over Denver, Southern Cali- \fornia over Oregon State, Califor- nia over San Jose State, Marquette over Arizona. : Food Still Gets Men TULSA, Okla. u&) — Catherine ‘Hunter, head of the University of Tulsa’s homemaking department, says being handy with a skillet is still the best way to trap a man, and she has figures to prove it. Out of 105 who have majored in home economics at. the school in the last five years, 103 are mar- Tied, one is engaged, and the other is teaching home economics, she says. $$$ $ SAVE $$ 8 8 For QUALITY USED CARS and General Auto Repairs TWINS GARAGE 1138 DUVAL ST. DIAL 2-2401 $$$ $ SAVE $3898 ADULTS WICKERS FOOTBALL TOMORROW NIGHT AAMS vs. BLUE DEVILS 6:30 ADVANCE TICKET SALB AT PAUL SHER’S TADIUM deliberately discharged by engaging starter on a car, with the switch off until 12 Mos., 39 Plate, 80 Amp. Battery Reg. Price $15.58—for only $8.95 18 Mos., 45 Plate, 100 Amp. Battery opponent make mistakes. I’li get one, and then I'll feel better.” |sion is not likely before spring. |batters and they were being south- urday. “ ; , I think he’s a good puncher, aR ‘and rousing right to Pawed to death. Parker is ranked seventh nation- i + looks q i j 4 He got it in the seventh, and with ally with 464 yarvis on total offense-|he takes an nood wallop ten the head that floored Slade in the| Never until one night during the & masterful ride that had the/161 yards rushing and 303 passing— ; idn’t only knockdown of the fight. Tecent playoff had we run into a crowd howling and cheering with|and hes been dicectly responsiblelgeet pedi ordeal Referee Dick Yourg and Judge an who had gone to the trouble the greatest demonstration at a/for eight touchdowns ‘ceroni, who now has won 44 of his Howard Hess scored it 51-49. Judge to find out for certain what the New York track in the memory of| “Parker is even better than last 47. bouts \Fred Connell gave it to Bucceroni, Percentages are. He was Red Rolfe, old-timers. year when he was responsible for His victory over Slade, while|S¢-46. who played a lot of third base for In the third race, Sande lost his'27 points against us,” observed is | Slade, normally a light-heavy,/the Yanks and later managed the unanimous, ed on a fourth-/ z A ra Late Ae Reyer —_— Sneak se paul Brvant. “The round sauhenncies setae 26.| weighed in at 177, while Bucceroni, Detroit Tigers. | if,” Red | When ie lacked aback a5 anaes me Balad ate year-old New York Negro on the fighting below his somal eciet said, “so when I Boca ise anager white Riarts icoiaial rere een Gab vareaihe da roe deep South mat for a count of nine. was 189. = chal Mek ae teat ok poagsce pei Honest Bread with his bare ae jand atkied: Protea noveceeiaed both wecnea sant the izetexeo| gay alan ante lee my batters, what he dadiacattet but was beaten in the final stride. | “According to sur scouts, Migsis-|uaed i cards that showed Danny /Sat, ey Ito ght Se every pitcher he faced; anced = It was different with Miss Wee- sippi State has more team speed Deiceieon ya See ee sy Morea tines Slade a time I found that the figures a sie, who had done Little in recent |and is much better offensively than /Meilinger, the senior handyman|caught Bucceroni against the were entirely convincing. The old races. The S-yearoid filly was/anyone we have played.” who has gained 109 yards on the ropes, bopping Danny's head from theory is a long way from being fourth going into the far turn, got| Kentucky’s main threat to offset ground and 200 more on 12 Pass|side to side with chcpping rights nonsense. up to third behind Piedmont Lass Parker’S Multiple talents is Steve receptions, and lefts. | Reg. Price $19.14—for only $IL95 18 Mos., 51 Plate, 110 Amp. Battery Reg. Price $21.56—for only $13.95 24 Mos., 57 Plate, 120 Amp. Battery Reg. Price $23.04—for only $15.43 3 Year, 51 Plate 110 Amp. Battery Reg. Price $27.51 — for only 318.85 3 Year, 57 Plate, 120 Amp. Battery Reg. Price $29.50—for only $20.95 HESTER BATTERIES FOR ALL MAKE OF CARS TRUCKS and BOATS FREE INSTALLATION 1116 WHITE ST “One day when I told one of:

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