Mencken Captures Bruins Come From * Behind To Defeat: _ Mt’! Canadiens 4-2.. , Much 30 — (AP) .- the Boswtrr Bruins if!‘ "fihfhtiinb. wilting into a. third ‘plenum National Hockey League “mpmpgy playoff defeat, their mmhty- Milt Schmidt, operating “on. ,. strange defensive poll. ‘pH-god them into a 4-2 victory om- Motttreal Oanadiens last niKhi before u crowd o! 13.909 at tilt? Cttrtlen. centre on the fattted Kitch- mqt- line had to drop back durlfll m, second period. when defence- . hfurray Henderson became sidelined with a groin itlillTY- cmnpttett; ltad built. up a 2-0 Mil dtfi-ittg the first six minutes o; play and the Bruins appeared hopelessly out of contention. when khmtdt joined their defencemen. About ltalfway through that PH’- lcd. Rclttnldt headed n five-man Bflettll t-ittttgc and witztckcd in Clare .\lttt'litt‘s assist. [less thatt two tttttttttes later. while botlt sides wetv shortita-rtded. Joe Carveth pulled the Bruins into a 2-2 tie by nnglllltl ltt PM 3280'! D055 Olli- rht- sides were still ttttderstaifed who. big Milt clinched the game b. putting on a breath-taking rtttk-lettgth dash for an tvtasslsted l\'. That counter appeared to dis- entlmce Oanadlens. for they were tmtitt». to get n shot on the Bos- tm. crtge ttntii ttrter t3 minutes of mm period action. tiotni-ttaled by their rivals. But. to make cer- tain, Woody Dumart gave Bruin! than fottrtlt gall late in the Qttme by billing tn Bobby Butler's re- billlfllfl After Maurice (the ROClWil Ricltttrd and Ken Mostlvl-l lml Canadiehs info their early lmd- ‘he game became decidedly rotltlll A total of 16 penalties were called. inrltttlittg five majors In addition to drawing u, five-minute sentence for ltigh-stiekl-tltl. Richard also W88 ttettt off to a 10-minute miscon- duct. term. The victory twas the first Bruins have gained over the Stanley Cull defenders in seven: W105 Oil 305W“ foe this season. The fourth 118ml‘ will be played hero Tuesday night and the fl.fth in Montreal next ‘Thursday. ' Canadiett: stiffer the i081 0i’ etotlt-ltcartetl Kenny Reardon with a loot injury late in the 805510“- SUMMARY lint Period. 1—Montteal. Richard dam :38 2—Montreal. Micodell (Cilflmilflf- lain) 5:28 Penalties: Hcrtdersort. Chatttinr- lain, Richard tmaiort Dumarl. nix-man. McGiil fmniot‘). Quilt)’ rmajorl. (K Rear- Beeontl Period. tr-Boston. Schmidt (Martin) 10:45 e-Boston. Oarveth" tillttflflllid‘ oltm 12:32 Schmidt (unassisted) Penalties: Smith. Richard (l0 minute miscottducti. Bottcltard tntajori. Gallinger tmaififl. F'lt\~ IfiRTi Third Period. t-Boston; Dumart (BatterCow-ifll 142B Penalties: Dumart. Chamberlain. Schmidt- Guticiolin. ‘ INDIA EYES CUPS NEW DELHI - (OP) —- India will compete tn the intentmtltmfll table tennis championships tn Paris this year. Two teams have been formed ~ one to play 0n "l6 ll°w Davis Oup tines and the other to pa; tn the Swatlhling cup. STRANGE’! ARE BROTHERS D0880, Auetrelie -- (OP) -- livery saturdny for several weeks two strangers met in a. pub in this little New Soutth Wales town. A chat one day about their boyhood mulled they are brothers Tom and Paddy Ryan aeparated since Fighters To Workout Here Today With a brisk advance sale of tickets being reported. the Sport- ing Club is expected to be jatntned to capacity Tuesday nigltt next when Bututy "Ace" MoCtloskey t-iimbs into the ring to ticfertd his Maritime ntiddlotvci-‘gltt. boxing title against the swinging fists of Pat Davis from Saint Joint and Hali- ilx and already the fans are en- visioning one of the toughest scrape to take place ltcre in a lottg while. Davis comes iterc willt the rcp- tltttllon of hetttg tt game, cuttrttgeotts two listed fighter titut absorbs punislttnettt like n SliOllgg soaks up water. He has ntet tnnny outstand- ing fighters ltoth itt the Mctritimes and Motttreal. several limes giving his QPPOIINII a big weight advantage and those wlto ltttvc watched the t~ltallenget' in action feel confident that McCloskcy is going to be pit- ted against a tough foemmt. Duvis will arrive in the City by plane to- day and will finish off his training at the Sporting Club this rvctting at 7 tfciock. I-‘tttts xrlto tmttltl like to tvatvit the workout ttrtv welcome- McCloskcy had a large crowd of fans watch him go through his paces Saturday afternoon at llli Club. Pttneitin’; illsl its llilril "5 ever, he pummellcd a cottflle 0i’ Sparmntes with vicious two" listed attacks a-nd attoears to beta the pink of condition for his tttle de- fence on Tuesday night. He ex- pects t0 Cnrne into the ring at 15B lbs. with Dztvls expected to 5PM! around 159 p McClosktyv will go lllwllllll "l5 flttal workout this afternoon at 2 01pm]; at the Sporting Cltrb The remainder of the fighters on tho card art- also ready for tlte boll and the (iarti as ‘tt shapes ttp now gives pretthise or provldtrg fitlltt; fans with t-tte of the most exciting nights of fisttcttffs staged ltere in recent years. Gaugihoo Wins Running 0f Grand National AINTREE, Enslahd- Matti‘ 3°" tCPJ-Att ‘elght-year-old brown gelding tvitlt a. name ltardiy MW of the stunned onlookers could 11"" nounca-Caugltoo-thunder-cu past the leaders at the Litird fence from home and ramped in an easy 20- lengths winner in Saturday’! are“ National steeplcchase. completing the ltlnckest. “spring double" the tiottot-s had seen l-n "early W" decades. _ Running like a champion m mud tvltirit sic-wed the H1019 llliiil" ‘tly weighed and ltcavtly backrrl horses, the Irish-bred Catttlllw- which twice had won the Ulster Grand National hut had raced lately with only ntntierale success] came uasttally home in alnwil (it'll-ti silence witit jockey Eddie Demp- sey watching the tt-ailtntt "Bill W" his shoulder. Second in this 104th running 0i the toughest horse race m the world was another Irish invader Lough Cottn. which finished tout length: ahead of the ‘Preach-bred Kaml. The favorite Prince Regent‘. running under the toll lmlwsl ° 175 pottnds, was fourth. The winner was quoted at 100-1 by the jubtlictttt bookics-—\vlw llflti to cash few bets-and Pild no 7 nhilllngs ($81-40) o" I “film” tntallzator investment (40 cents) --better titan 200 i0 1- _ only two m“. players realized the spring tlotthle. "i $3.599 5 shillings to a ti-sitiillng bet-—odt.:. of nearly 36.0904- Iineo 1917. Caughoo, son of Witltin the Law. What's the secret of real shaving ‘llil lliAVl IS IITTIII WNIN Tltll LATHE} STAYI WITTIII _t . lhuo. A quick-drying lather drier out on your face-cannon sling and ‘mill- Wlut you want i0 I rldl. . W‘ Iv- if»? ".12.....tii‘."i."..‘,si."'° "tlemn. “nlalnrthunn "ill h!’ 7W: bond nah and ll"- m tuna. annual-m Ivuwltlooltlwnuoroondhlab. TU [IFEIWY SIIAVIIII llliill WITH HAY-III! MINI x _ Q i.» w ‘ft- I comfort? t. MARCH 31. 1947 New Game Good But Yanofsky Prefers Chess 11y JOHN l). HAMILTON NElW YORK, March I29AtCP)—— Do you long to amaze and tttyst- ify your friends at parties? John Scat-nt- is your man. Ho has invented a two-man parlor game which chess master Abe Yttnufsky ttdltlils is “tn-obably the ntost cotttpiicttted" to be dreamed up since chess. Yesterday Suttrne and Yattofsky -ilte LlZ-t-ottr-tild Winnipeg chess txpert~gol together to discuss the relative tncrits of Scurno tprottnttncettScar-nee) and cltess. .»\itcr’a careful look at the new table sport. Yttnofsky said he didn't think that Scarne was quite ready to replace chess-but he admitted that. Scarne was "a good and interesting" game. Scarne. a Stock)‘. cigar-chewing gentleman with a New Jersey ac- cent. spent the wtztt" years expos- ing crooked gamblers in the arm- ed services of the United States. He took nine years to develop the gttmc which bears his name and lt-e claims that its 40,000,000 (count ‘enti starting positions and high cerebral demands make It. the most revolutionary devel- opment in the games world since a Per n king dreamed up a wtar Home 2. 00 years ago which now is known as chess. (Chess. by fhe way. has only 20 (lllhning moves but they lump to 400 on the next move. 70.000 tvltltltt a few more and an infin- iloly greater number titan 40.000,- titlfi before the ga-tne. ends.) Scarne the-cording to ScarneJis so simple that. a cltlid can learn it in a few ntintttes. But ltc adds titltt. it also is so complex that an extacrt could spend years on it; ticfort- figuring ottt. alil the posit- ions. It was at. that. point that Yan- ofsky and Bob Wade of Wel- lington. N. Z.. were called in to give an opinion. Yanofsky has just rctttrtted from a successful tour of Ettrope durinfl notch he played as many as 40 simultan- eous games of chess. Wade. 5. is a former New Zealand ell-am- plon who also played top tourna- ment chess in Europe. ‘ Tlfeybotlt took a long look at Scarne and said they thought chess still was safe. Scttrne. incidentally. is played on a board which at first glance rentinds one slightly of a par- t-hor-sl board. It has 28 red and black checkers and a number of numbers to place the checkers on. The idea is to get rid of the checkers as fast as possible- something like rummy. The man with tltedast red checker on the board loses. completed the gooey course-matte even more dangerous than usual by tvlnter floods and Saturday's raln—in 10:31 1-5. the slowest Grand National time in ltalf-a-cen- fury. The largest field since 1929 went to the post. Of the 5'1 runners. 1'7 finished within the time limit and 16 fell. Incidentally. the last. 100-1 shot. victory was in 1929 when Gregeinch paid those odds in trim- talng 65 others. Ono Borne Killed In Saturday's running of the his- toric raee at this course jult. out- side Liverpool one horse, J. Mar- tin Sandersonls Linthlll. was kill- ed. falling just past the canal turn the second time around. Oidtimers said they could not recall a Na- tional in which there were l0 few serious casualtiel or so many firt- lshers. This was despite the muddy go- ittt; witivh many feared mllhi r0- sttlt in a, heavy number of casual- ties in the big field. fighting it: way over 30 of the toughest ob- stacles in the world in travelling the l-miio 856-yard course. The track, not fully recovered from re- cent. flooding. was made heavier by early morning rain and was patchy at noon with some of the going fair but several ltretches showing greasy puddlel. A thin, steady rain resumed about an hour before post time and l crowd estimated at between 2501M.‘ and 300.000 watched from beneath umbrellas or in the stands. Lovely Cottage. the 1946 winner was withdrawn at’ the hut. minute. presumably because of the sticky footing. ‘rho otght-yeer-old Olulloo. like may a Iliiflll Mani before ithn, In a "cheap" bane, netting u a hn-ynr-otd for 1U and later in! over fl-qole-old Jack Mdiomil. a Dublin jeweler. Oeuihoo lcturday won $0M loveretgns (@900) ift prize money and a reported 10,000 in beta. . . W! Ciion s? Phone 2448 lteague contender than Rciser is fold me there is no way those tepurhd on betM "Mpolllbie to l-Wlh |"“I n- . .. .. ... ...... ~- . , _M __ _, p v _>___ At last. - - - a better tnousctrap! In Courtenay. B. C., a tnan pickcd up a saokful of oysters recently and brought. them hom-e. He left tltrm cn his porch overnight and one oyster apparently opened up for a breath of air and a look around. An inquisitive motile in- vestigoiuL-sriap. It was the long-sought better mouse trap but the d scuvcrtr rritts to divulge II-lS name and shctrs no anxiety to have the ucrld btat a path to his door. :t...a.;..;. Braves As Dark Horse J.__ By JACK HAND Raiser’: Health Holds Key To Dodger Fortunes By JACK HAND HAVANA. March Z8—tAP)-- Brooklyn's fortunes rise and fall daily utith a succession of medi- cal bulletins on the celebrated case of Pistol Pete Raiser. The latest word. direct from the pat- ient. is that he will be ready to open the season and play most of the 154 games. The Raiser story remains the key to the Dodger ball club. With the exception of‘ Stan Mtusial of St. Louis. there is no one man more important to a National FORT LAUDERDALB. Flip, March 26 — tAPt -— Billy Southwortifs Boston Braves, '75 per cent improv- ed over last year's fourth-place club, are the dark horse team of the Na- tional Ltague and a definite fac- tor in the pennant rave. This up-and-cominlg organization. headed by its energetic president. Lou Perini, has the oash and the determtination to make something of the Braves. Given a little more pitching strength attd a dosh of luck, the Braves cc-uld be a contctrrdetn-Eveat as they stand tcdtay they Tifltrre a. sure shot for the first division, a distant goal a few years cgo. Earl Tcrgeson. bespectacled rookie first. baseman from Seattle. is an good example of the new Braves splrrit. Right now. Torgy ts the lfimsity‘ first tacker because Ray Sanders will be out for most of the season as a result of last year's broke-n to Brooklyn. There are many who believe the Dodgers could have stavcd of! the late bid of the Cardinals last Septcmlber if Reiser luad been in the line-up. Instead. he was ltobialihg around on crutches with a broken leg as the result. of an impulsive slide back into first base against; the Phililes. Reiser recently returned from a PAGE V EN Britons‘ Gloomy About 0ountry’s Sport Prospects LONDON. Mart-it 26 t/tr) tAPt _ Britain's lalvck year of. 5W1‘! in 1946. in which the country was trimmed at. yrtcket. tennis. 8'0" fl-nd horse racing, has Whipped 11D 8058M around the pavilions and “IS ihtlf if might be better fr)! ztionct o nian s Rally in Final Half To Win From Local Girls 36-25 Displaying plenty of l¢0fll|z1Edl one to give them In l-‘I load punch in the last hail‘ of the game} at ‘he llallwil)’ milk and make it: and then itnltllng oil tthe ttnattallyhotlyi“ cattle surge of their trppmrettf/t Mont-ton Bill. the 1131116 stiwried up as the (7.120. Saturday night. dcfeairdHllllll \tu."trtet' got untieru-zrv. Four Print-n 11f wntcs (3,538 3525 m: baskets roiled front the ltttttds of Um first ganpg n; the New Brunw the visitors during the ion min- Wlek-Prlncg Edward [slum] “He! utes as Prince of Wales were IC- for the girls intermediate baskef- Pvllhtmc far one to give C.Y.O. a bull title and will carry their lettd.'16"9 lead enterint! tile llufll Quer- lnto the sectmtf game slated for St lei‘ of the encottttler. Bu‘. if the ‘ulllillllb gym. Mmtrttm, after the ‘Willi: ltztti been slow in the pre- Ettster ittnlltlays. tiotts thirty lhillillPS of play the Respecting cach ntlters‘ rcortngl “l0 Win15 more than made up for ability the two teams playqd “l it in the final quarter of the hug. close-attacking. player to ayer fought tussle. A total 0f 18 basket: name all tlttrnlz: the first half thatt were 57ml Willi the Winners earn- ltelll slit-Lint down ti» a imttlntuttt. lllg a ntargitt of 10-8 to give them Cllpllflll/Zlllxii on titree pttttaity shots‘ lllUll‘ ttlcvctt point lead of the rp- antl shooti g a field basket Fiorine‘ “"11 Elli"?- Evans gave the local girls a 5-1 But in defeat the Co-Eds served 1nd at the end of the first qunrter not-ice that they are atill in ihl QVETYbtXlYs peace of mind if Brit- c-Ytts qtttt the intertlttiottal sucrtst vrena. for about 10 117511; anti ttl-, lowed a. new batch of athletes ttndt horses to mature. Cricket-playing Countries will 5il°l1l against such a drastic. step. but the fact rema that. there 1s a, “Tile ltfldtl‘ 0i hi is lotus who} Wvuld like Britain to 519p nu. f...‘ B-‘few rears and then Comg bank lil-‘lih it breed of athletes who could "w" ma" hold their own against the rest of the world. l ‘Its an old alibi that miter... “m! Rel cherish soon food to build Wyrld boaters on the pltlyiilf! field.‘ But this “let's quit for t. time" nt-T ‘nude if- bfl-Sed on a desire to sec‘ Britain get back t.-.- front of the world 1n the sports field. i A Positive step in this direction‘ gflédy has bB-Sn taken by the Thiush I99 Hockey Associaticn. S_ body entered a team for the coming world chlimpimlfthips at‘ P1118118. and when tt found it cottld‘ not 18M players tzccd enough srlt1"‘ an ntirrt-ation that Britain wont-t not playing. ,, Saul secrelalii’ A I". Altcnteil whats the gggd 0g Us goirg ma?‘ l0 take an awful betting, we're. ‘wklfilg “head i0 five YPZtrs front‘ now. Gmfcr Hennll’ Ctllitdlt. wit» lvt. Drearuatureiy been reported n; (an; zain 0.! Britain's R_vd~ct~ Cup team‘ 0 play against United stat... m... lesflfitlfils next Ncwmber. seem: m hold similar views trip to St. Louis where he was assured by Dr. Robert Hyland of the Cardinals that there was no- thing seriously wrong with his night s oulder. Dr. Hyland had operat last December to repair a separation of the clavicle from the sternum. Vlfhen Reiser swung and ntissed on a high pitch in Havana. there were sirapp pains in the shoulder. Dodger officials and Reiser feared he might have torn loose the connecting tissue. ‘ Now Raiser thin-ks he will be all right. ' “Dr. I-lyland told me I should tue the arm carefully an though ti. were new." Reiser said. "He arm. 'I‘orges0n isn't too happy about: Sanders’ tetbsttnce. strange as, it might seem. ' ' "I wish Sanders were here," he stays I'd like to win this job fair and square and not have anybody saying I got it just because the other fellow twastft. tron-ad; even if Lotu Gehrig was on this squad I would be playing first base far the Braves. I'm confident I catn- hit this hind of pitching once I find my- self. - The deal by which third baseman Bob Elliott cam»; to the Braves from Pittsburgh looks like another meas- tsr stroke. Elliott appears to have caught the Sout-ltwcrth spirit and t: hustling like a rookie. He has solved the third base problem. Dick Culler. who catne into his own and played a top flight big letgue shortstop the last half o! the 1946 season. appears to have the edge over Silzlby sisti, u strong htt- ter at Itrz-clianapolis. Second base is still an open scrap between Connie Ryan. last. ymfs regular. card Danny Murtaugh. I former Phillie. vino was drafted lrcm the Cardinals’ Rochester farm after- a .322 season. The Braves are deep in outfield strength with the apparent first line eonsisli-zrg of Danny Litwhilor in left. Johnny Hopp in centre a-nd Tommy Holmes in right. n trio o.’ gcod hitters. Mike McCormick. Bama Rowell and Tom Neill. South- ern Assc-ciaticn batting king with a 3'14 mark at Birmingham. probably will remain “with the club. bones can be separated again. unless I run into a wall or some- thing like that.“ Pete may not be quite as fast on the bases as he was last sea- son because he still is troubled by the after effects of the broken leg. The bre-ak was just above the ankle. Dr. Hyland also re- examined the leg and found no- thiing wrong. Wins $100,000 But Truck Driver To Continue Job TORONTO, Maroh 30 —(CP)— A 38-year-old emergency truck driver and a/IZ-year-old schoolboy hit. the major Jackpot in the Irish sweepstakes Saturday. but. the windfalls didn't make much differ- ence ln their daily lives. Russell Long of Toronto. only Canadian to litit_ the $100,000 Jack- pot. said he itntended to continue wit-it his Job of entering burning buildings to ahut off the illuminat- ing gas supply. lutd Claude Rottsel. a seventh grade student from Lachinc. Que. "viii be going to soltool tomorrow as usual, his mother said as family spokesman for the youngster. LotHB. employed with the don- eurrters GasCompany in Toronto. said Saturday after hi3 wife tele- phoned him the news: “I feel lust a little sick at the ttnntrny at this moment." Under the norn-deplutme All 50 Ran. Long held ticket number 13E- 50230 on Caughoo. long-shot win- ner of the Grand National steeple" chase at Aintree. But he kept. right on working until he could get a re- lief man and titan went home for a celebration with his wife. IS-YPBY" old daughter and friends. Young Mueol. when tether works at tthe Lnsnlle coke punt in Mont- real. hold ticket MV-MOM on Conn. which finished $000M in the gruelling race. Hie tangent: 31f...‘fifl..'f“fi.,§“i,gfil.liit‘g“§tlhaiitie l0 about. making an atomic windfall. ' Tllhey were among 46 (Tanatlians _ whose tickets were drawn 0h 110"“ earlier in the week and wthose venyt- um paid an estimated total of $19.».- 11; tn mum price: and additional 8.848 in residual and consolation prises. 0f than there were only four money winner; and one ct’ thug remained unidentified. One, with g potential 320.000 from the third-place horse Kaml. ATOMIC BOMB DESIGN FOB. HOME IIOBBYISTS Ono of tho world! top nuclear piwalclata, Profeeeor Ilrederlo Jol- iot-Ctirie. seen here, French high commissioner of atomic energy. teuts in the March issue of the "United Nations World" how It» ticket AL-47006. The ot-her wirmlet- (of $20,000 on Kamli was Douglas Martin of Tor- onto. employee of a manufacturing Jewelry firm. The other 42 Canad- ians whose horse; failed to place qualified for minimum prizes of $336 cam. Five others won residual and consolation nwardl lllffitat- ttrcntes new mutton creams used the nom-de-plunte of Cab and tng $5.846. War llit D!‘\'(‘|tI|!mt't;1f Cotton itas pointed out that the m" h“ Checked development or yuung holler-i and lie rams home. "t! helm that ants-ht- team‘ against top-flight Amt." ' n Ilfost will fCt- the fnggf pa" p h) be: picked frcm golfers who “IP11; knock. 1 mind as the vial-tors were held to one P11011111: for the two provlnu lotlc wnalty \itt-‘. srnre ttftrtr ha‘; title. With their sltootiltg UPlOW ing two ll.*1lll'l\\(‘(l. In Ill/g sOt't)l1titllll1‘ltJi' the fiygt pa“ of l]... sum“ quarter hftzttctotrs attack got roll: they suddenly found the tjattge in ing for three baskets to the C:-.ll1@ last few minutes to whittle tlfdvn a. lti-tuoint opponents lead to eleven and nearly earn an even break on the quarter's scoring. Loretta Gottltl led the scoring Datratie oitlt seven baskets for l. total of fourteen points with Eileen ing around the cottrses back in 1939. Club acvtl tiavtliott ‘gotsipers went into action attcw as they read an iittrrtttt report from the British (Al'- gattizittg contmittee for the Olympic Lattdrigan leading the Print-e of 111111195 to be held in London in Wales offensive with six points. 1948. 'i‘ltis report dealt with plansyaii coming in the last quarter o4 that lutve so far been made for the the game. varityts t-vetttr wlticlt all told tnay be ttltttt-ssczi by 1.000.000 tint-sons. Olyttrpit- gantcs always have had bitter ttpllflllttiits in Britain — Deo- ple who have long been sick of the international squabbles they breed. It's a strong point with the "let's quit for a time" section that Brit- ain will not be in shape to put top- fligltt athletes on tin-l tracks in i948. n. l they would have preferred that B in did not act as host (nullity or even participate in the 14th gentle: The various sports bodies, apart perhaps from the Fltyalball Assoc- tion and the Amateur Boxing Association who will nominate men for pre-Olyntpie trluls. don't ap- pear to be too hopeful that. Britaitr will ntalte a accd sltcwirtg in these Millet‘ ~ ~ 1948 gators. Et-"atts /\ great (‘rial of the |il'C\€lll "iet's‘l-tillltll'lgiln tttttt" feeling can be traced to the l M°D°llald betting the J-lttgiantttl cricket teatm l 3009115011 has token from Australia. iQtlillleY in. the Pfiililllfl, sttntmet- ntottilts a 1391"" sltottvitt" by Briittirt against Shem?" the ctitttpnra ivcly young Eottth Af- Fllftlllllfllfitltl rican crick-rt side that will be here. T643] a. win itl the Walker Cup mulclti ‘i-cieleei Earl G0 against the amateurs of the United States our the St. Andrews" links, and a better showing by British tennis l) dtttrittg the Wimble- don fzrttitgltt ntay dissipate this preset-in day gloom. Littettp» and soul-s FG FS 2 Monctun PF Pg; Carroll Legere l... GDuld . Degrttec Dtmplty Mcltmis . . -Gillespie Brown . Cunningham Gould Gautreau McLellztn Totals \- >- IA°|¥CN to ;:Q-—'::ct\:--tab:ow o: mueoscec FS to F Co-Fdl PF r=~;-;.;~'- 1i =_.;.;;.;....L.;... UDOODQQOL-IO UIIOD'-'C>—-—2~'l~; fis-canpsmotr; IIAWAIYS ORCHID! More titan 1.000 varieties of or- v .4) top to wheels-get this e ferent Studebaker. shield and window glass "see everything." 219 Great George St ..- UT your money into a real [vostwttt- car, if you're buying a new one. 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