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The Evening Independent from Massillon, Ohio • Page 18

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Massillon, Ohio
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18
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Tigers Play Good Local Five Seeking Its 3rd Victory By LUTHER EMERY The Washington high sbhool basketball team goes after its third victory of the season here tonight with undefeated Canton Lehman high school as its opponent. For many years one of Stark county's top-notch teams, Lehman is again living up to its reputation of being a high scoring i THE POLAR BEARS knocked off Columbus East 40-35 in their opening engagement and came right back in their second encounter to beat Wooster's Generals 55-35. Wooster was Lehman's last game and the Polar Bears have been idle since that contest which was played Dec. 10. The Lehman team is built around Johnny "Butch" Maxson, an All- County center last year and a real point getter.

Johnny was up to his old tricks around the basket in the Wooster game when he caged 10 field goals. He has 33 points for Lehman's two games. LEHMAN will have Jim Wuske oumuuii ack on the forwards a vdand SPORTS EDITORS from leading newspapers throughout the U. S. met in Washington to discuss plans for combatting juvenile delinquency with programs of sports.

Among the sports writers in attendance were left to right, William F. Fox, jr. of Indianapolis News; Bob Considine. International News Service; Douglas W. McGregor, acting attorney general: Al Santoro, Los Angeles Examiner; Jack Carberry, Denver Post, and Hugh Daly, Detroit Times.

(International). TIE GAME NO. 1 ODDITY NEW YORK. The St. Louis Cardinal-Brooklyn Dodger regular season tie for the National league pennant has been voted the No.

1 sports oddity of 1946 by a close margin over the Ted Williams shift. Twelve of the 56 writers who participated in the annual Associated Press poll to determine the oddest event of the year, agreed that the Red Bird-Brook Standoff was tops while 11 and Dean Becker and Al Schaaf at the guards. They give the Bears a well balanced "team, and there appears little doubt but 'that Lehmaa is superior to both Timken and Akron Central, the Tigers' two victims this season. Coach li Bud" Houghton will start Don Wiener and Dick Gardner on the forwards and Bob Link and Tony Uliveto at the guards. There's some doubt as to who will get the call at center, which right now is the weakest spot on the Massillon team.

Earl Johnson, a substitute last year, had the inside track for the position at the start of the season and started the first two games, but Stanley Kutz, a member of the reserves a year ago, has been more successful at scoring and may be St. Louis shift for Slugger Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox was the strangest occurrence. The other votes were well scat-. tered. Although the Chicago Cubs and the New York Giants played off a tie game which decided the 1908 pennant in favor of the Bee Gees Are Defeated By City College By The Associated Press Bowling Green State university's Cubs, the Card-Dodger deadlock marked the first time in major league baseball that two teams wound UD the regular season in a dead heat for the title.

The two teams entered the final day of the campaign snarled for the lead and both contestants lost, resulting in a best- two-out-of-three game playoff for the flag which the Red Birds won in "two straight games. The now famous "Williams shift" was employed by Manager Lou Boudreau of the Indians after the Boston strong boy had belted three home runs off Tribal hurlers in the opener of a doubleheader. Boudreau moved practically his entire team into right field and Manager Ed Dyer Cards used a variation of the move in the World Series. Ray Robinson Can Note Make It Official By JACK HAND NEW YORK Ray 3 basketball winning streak was end-! Robinson, the "uncrowned chani- JI i "vr tr "I- 1 rrn4-r- T-iir- tn Johnson is quicker for defensive purposes than Kutz, but has not been able to get the ball through the hoop. Kutz has bagged three fielders.

The game tonight will be the last for the Tigers before the Christmas holidays. They will not see action again until Jan. 3 when they go for their first road game with McKinley. Wildcats And Iowa Remain Undefeated CHICAGO (AP) Iowa and Northwestern were still in the undefeated class of Western conference basketball teams today after the Hawkeyes' 44 to 41 triumph over St. Mary's of California last night and the Wildcats' 65 to 51 victory over North Carolina.

It was the fifth victory in a row for Iowa and the fourth for Northwestern. North Carolina, previously in four games, lost to Northwestern in the first half of a doubleheader at Chicago stadium, fn the second contest, the University of Texas Longhorns won their seventh victory of the season by defeating De Paul of Chicago, 61 to 43. ed at 11 games in New York by City college 52 to 45, and Butler beat Cincinnati 58 to 53 at Indianapolis to take the lead in the new Mid-American conference Thursday night. In two other out-of-state contests, Ohio college quintets came out on top. At Chestertown, Wittenberg whipped Washington college 68 to 48, and at Elizabethtown, Findlay topped Elizabethtown college 59 to 38.

Within Buckeye borders, Muskingum and Capital, both unbeaten, won Ohio conference games to extend their victory strings to four straight. Muskingum beat Wilmington at New Concern 72 to 44, and Capital thumped Ashland in Columbus 83 to 45. Xavier of Cincinnati lost at Toledo 64 to 49, and Cedarville won a home game from Anderson college of Indiana 47 to 42. Toledo's victory was its third in four starts and the fifth loss for Xavier in six games. Cedarville.

paced by Forward Harold Farmer of Hamilton, pion." gets his delayed chance to make it official tonight when he takes on Tommy Bell of Youngstown. Ohio, with the welterweight title hanging in the balance. After five years of waiting for a shot at the 147-pound crown, the Harlem sugar man is a 1 to 4 The strategy paid off as Williams was held to five singles. Football oddities included such beauts as Ohio State flying to Los Angeles for a game with Southern California and forgetting to take along a single football; a Washington and Lee player lining up in a West Virginia huddle by mistake in a game played in the mud; officials instructing the band to play the Star Spangled Banner three times during the Arizona- Santa Clara game to halt play because of roughness. Although it received only one vote, the sinking of the judges stand at the womens national swim championships at Shaka- mak park, caused plenty of guffaws.

Hair-Reese Team Leads Cage League STANDINGS W. Harr-Heese 3 Y-Vets 2 Trojans 2 Penney 2 Fiori Drive Ins 0 DAVs 0 L. Pet. 0 1000 1 666 1 666 1 666 000 000 The Harr-Reese team, formerly the Young Men, took over sole possession of first place in the Y. M.

C. A. membership basketball Meats, Loops And O'Neils yfm Games Coming from so far behind that it didn't seem possible that they could come close to winning, the Spillman Meats turned the tables on the Navarre Merchants and butcher- jd them, 51-32, in a City Class AA league contest Thursday veiling. In two other battles, the Loop Loops took Moose Lodge No, 4S1, 29-26. and O'Neils defeated Shanklin Radio, 42-33.

All three games were played on the Emerson chool floor. AT THE END of the first quar- er the Navarre Merchants led 156, but Spillman's warmed up fast and as the game entered the last period the score stood in their far, 35-31. Top scorer for the Meats, was Wiener with nine goals for 18 points. Agler led the Merchants vith 14 points. The Loop the Loops trailed for hree periods but surged ahead during the last few minutes of play ind won by a close margin.

The setup was just the opposite in the clash between O'Neils and he Radios. O'Neils led at the end the first quarter and maintained liat lead throughout the game. Luke chalked up 11 points for he Loop the Loops, Gutchall made 1 for the Moose, Leininger got .0 for Shanklins and Profant sank 2 for O'Neils. 'The next Class AA contests will be played Thursday, Dec. 26, start- ng at 6:45 p.

m. Pairings are: loop the Loops vs. Navarre Merchants, Moose vs. Shanklin and Spillman vs. O'Neils.

The summaries and standings: STANDINGS W. L. Pet. Loop the Loops 2 1000 1000 1 500 2 000 2 000 Moose 0 2 000 favorite to whip Bell and earn league Thursday night by defeat- recognition by both the New the Fiori Drive Ins, 29-15, for commission and- the National Box-j their third consecutive victory. ing association after their 15-round The winners were on top all Madison Square Garden bout.

the way going out in front, Partly because they figure! 7.2, in the first quarter and did Weiner artland Krisher teese leek Britzenhof Bentch Scourfield Robinson deserves a title chance and partly because they know Bell as a capable workman.who never has been knocked out, the fans are expected to tern out 15,000 strong for a 590,000 gate. Beaten only once in his career of 75 fights, and then by Middle- weight Jane their best work in the last period in which they added 15 points to six. Seven points gave Billie scoring honors of the game. Letjkiedes was high for the losers with six. The Y-Vets mad it two wins in three, starts by topping the previously unbeaten Penney's, 40-32.

scored 20 points, came from I new ki had been matched with Marty- Servo for a championship scramble before the Schenectady welter abdicated his throne because of a sore nose. Bell finally was selected as a logical foe and all agreed to recognize the winner as the i Robinson Th eyen through the behind in the second half to beat the Hoosiers. Bowling Green's Falcons played The new welters met before, in January of 1945, with Robinson earning a decision on his boxing C.C.N.Y. before 17,126 fans at finesse and class. In his last out- Madison Square Garden and trailed after the first minute of to become the unbeaten New York cagers seventh victim of the season.

During the first half, City College led 12-9, 22-12 and 25-21. the Ohio ing, Sugar Ray got off the floor to stop Artie Levine in Cleveland. Bell lost two of six 1946 fights, both to middleweights, Cecil Hudson and LaMotta. The 23-year-old Negro boy has been beaten 10 In 'the inaugural of basketball 1 111 the second half, relations between Michigan and! ans moved to within, three points Stanford at Ann Arbor, the Wolverines turned back the Indians, at 53-50, City scored nine consecutive points to pile up its biggest 45 to 37. It was the first game of margin of the game.

Stanford's five-game invasion of the middle west. Tonight Stanford plays at Michigan State. In other midwestern games last night, touring "Tulane university defeated Loyola university at Chicago, 67 to 52, and at Davenport, Iowa, St. Ambrose whipped Illinois Teachers of Macomb, 69 to 52. Tonight, Illinois Whiz Kids will attempt to bounce back from their upset by Missouri Monday when they meet California at Berkeley in the first of a two-game series.

Purdue is the only other Big Nine team in action. The Boilermakers meet St. Louis university at Lafayette. Xavier Takes Purcell Coach Mac Otten, six-foot six-inch freshman center for- the Falcons, led lis team's scoring with 10 points, jut was out of most of the second lalf because of personal fouls. Forward Irwin Dambrot of City Col- was high scored with 14 points, 12 of them in the second naif.

After trailing 14-11 at the end of the first quarter, Butler took a 27-20 lead over Cincinnati at the lalf, then staved off a Cincinnati rally in the closing minutes. Cen- Bill Westerfield of Cincinnati scoring honors with 20 points. The game was Butler's first in the Mid-America conference, and Cincinnati's first conference setback in two games. CINCINNATI (AP) Studious, 28-year-old Edward Leo Kluska, whose Cincinnati Purcell high school football teams have fashioned a string of 29 games without setback, today was Xavier university's' new head football coach. His appointment to succeed Phil Bucklew, released Dec.

4 after hii first Musketeer eleven won only three and lost seven games, was announced last night at a banquel honoring Xavier's 1946 squad. Pau! D. (Chip) Cain, chairman of the board of athletic cor.trol, did noi disclose the length or terms of the contract which moved Kluska recognized as one of the best ends in Xavier history, into collegiate ranks. Bucklew, another Xavier athletic star of former years, also was di rector of athletics, a post still un filled. In announcing his release the board said it had acceptec Bucklew's offer to "step aside' but the former coach of the Co lumbus Bulls, a professional team insisted he Bombers Back In Top Spot NEW YORK (AP) The St.

Louis Bombers are back in undisputed possession of first place in the western division' of the Basketball Association of America. In a game highlighted by 25 personal fouls on each side and three technicals, the Bombers outscored the Boston Celtics, 76-74 last night to break their first place deadlock with the Chicago Stags, who bowed, 81-77, to the Providence Steamrollers. In the only other game, the Philadelphia Warriors coasted to a 58-44 victory over the Cleveland Rebels with star forward Joe Fulks loading the assault with 22 points. Compared to the other two games, the Warriors and Rebels had a tea parly as only 30 personal fouls were called with Cleveland drawingje and Philadelphia 14. Since 1775, U.

S. Marines have mads more than 200 landings on foreign shores- iimes in his career. Servo copped the crown by first half which ended with a count of 18-18 but the Vets pulled ahead, 33-23, in the third quarter and stayed in front. Sedjo and Yellic each scored 10 points but Rohr of the losers won scoring honors of the tat with 15. The Trojans stayed even with the Y-Vets and Penney's as they downed the DAV's, 40-28.

They trailed through most of the first three quarters which ended with the DAV'S ahead, 25-22, but iced the game by scoring 18 points to three in the final period. Their high men were Ginther with 10 points and Mazon with eight. Schmidt got 13 for the DAV's. Totals 13 6i Totals Score by quarters: Penney's 8 10 Y-Vets 8 10 Tigers Defeated The 17th st Tigers lost a 64-56 decision to Pigeon Run at Pigeon Run Thursday night. Feichter scored 28 points and Snyder 16 for the winners while Harig got 20 and Miller 16 for the losers.

Abel Morton Theken knocking out Freddie (Red) Cochrane in four rounds last February. He retired without defending; Scot Losses Outnumber Victories at the. College of Wooster are hopeful that Santa Claus can promise them a few more victories for 1947 than fell to the Scots for the year 1946. In eight branches of intercollegiate athletics for the year just closing Wooster teams won 27, lost 29 and had three ties. Two spring sport squads, baseball and golf, had exceptionally good seasons.

The baseball team won 12 of 14 games. The golf team won six, tied one, lost one, won the Ohio conference tournament and George Locker, Wooster's No. 1 golfer won the individual title. For 1946, the basketball teams won six and lost 13. The 1945-46 combination won four and lost 10 while the newly formed 194647 cage squad won two of five games in December.

In football, Wooster defeated Capital and Denison, tied Muskingum and Heidelberg and lost to Findlay, Akron, Mt. Union and Oberlin. The cross country squad this fall dropped two of three races, the tennis team last spring dropped six matches with nary a victory and the only swimming meet for the year was a defeat. The summaries: Flori's Drive In G. King 0 Limbach 2 Austin 0 White 0 Vaughn 0 Letjkiedes 3 Young 0 Hirr-Keese G.

F. OBeese- 0 1 OjBillie 3 1 OjGossett 1 OiNeidenthal 2 SjLutz 2 OiPiciacchio 3 2 IHossel 0 Totals Score by quarters: Fiori's 2 Harr-Reese 7 13 Penney's Lawson I T-Vets G. G. F. 1 OiSedjo 3 4 0 1 2 1 1'Prazniak.

3 0 1 liPaycr 1 0 is 8 5 15 Trojans D. A. G. G. F.

1 2Howell 1 1 1 1 3 0 0 Woods Mazon 4 0 Gesen Lennox 3 Ginther 3 Mclnnis 2 Huffman 2 Totals IS 10J Totals Score by quarters: Trojans 9 3 D. A. 8 6 2 5 IjShanklin 1 IjSnyder 0 11 10 11. McKinley Has 10 Contests CANTON Canton McKinley's Bulldogs will play a 10-game foot ball schedule in 1947, T. B.

Jack man, McKinley faculty manager announced Thursday. The slat calls for one less game than th 1946 program. Cleveland Lincoln again will bi the opening foe. It was the Liti coin team'that handed the BuK dogs their lone loss last season 32 to 7. The schedule: Sept.

19, Cleveland Lincoln; 26 at Warren; Oct. 4, Canton Timken 10, Canton Lincoln; 17, at Toled Scott; 24, Steubenville; 31, at All. ance; Nov. 8, Niles; 15, at Lake wood; 22, Massillon, Baltimore May Join League SPSAKHSAP Of THE TEAM WHICH Mil TRY CUP FROM AUSTRALIA rue MATCHES AT THIS fMoas itoefW ms since. DURIN6 TKS 2 WORLD Of WMKH IT SPIHT IN AUSTRALIA AneftCAKS Wit JOBS 1.1 TVS OF TSCHHIQUSS TH5 cS SPORTS ROUNDUP 2 pillman 1 Shanklin 0 Navarre 0 Spillman Meats G.

F.l 9 0 3 0 3 0 0 2 Miller 2 Navarre G. F. OjHaas O'Brown OlAirhart 0 Seece O'Rumberger OlAgler 7 OiDoll 0 I'Stivaktas 0 Oi Totals 24 31 Totals 14 4 Score by quarters: Ipillman 6 20 35 51 Navarre 15 23 31 32 Loop the Loops G. Heflin 0 Autrey 0 H. GiUom 1 0 Thompson 1 ce 5 McDew 0 O.

Gillom 2 Arrington 4 Webb 0 OIGable OiDarrah OIKetter QjCresenze OiZorger Moose G. F. 2 1 5 1 11 Totals 13 Totals Score by quarters: sop the Loops 5 5 13 29 Moose 6 1 15 26 O'Xeil's G. Hunter 0 Allman reenwalt Profant rim Serquist Syelene Fox 2 Shinklin F.I G. F.

2 0 2 0 OiLeininger 4 0 2iKetter 3 OIBatcha 1 1 1 Archibald 0 IMiglich 1 Michigan State May Turn Big Nine Into A Big Ten By HUGH FULLERTON, JR. NEW YORK, some angles: Syracuse more han a bit annoyed at Biggie Munn's hurried departure for Michigan itate One suggestion (heard from at least two sources) is that Michigan State wanted him to support its effort to become the tenth member of the "Big Ten." Munn has the background and popu- arity in the Western conference that Michigan State needs; the Ipartans' rival for the conference spot is titt, which has the same'sort if a guy in Wes Fesler, plus a strong western football schedule for next fall Question is where Biggie improved his position: Syracuse aiumni agreed to match the salary offered One result of the Syracuse peeve is that Ribs Baysinger, an assistant these many years, may be upped to the head coaching even that isn't sure. Another upstate coaching story, has Ox Da Grosa going from Holy League Game First Baptists turned in their initial win in the Y. M. C.

A. church league Thursday night by handing the St. John's Evangelicals their second consecutive loss by a 59-30 score. Running up a 25-13 lead in the first quarter, the Bsptiats were well out in front all tbc way. They had a 33-18 edge at the half and enjoyed a 41-22 advantage at the close of the third stanza.

f'otals 19 Totals 14 Score by quarters: O'Neil's 17 26 42 Shanklin 8 13 25 33 Dragons Beat Alliance Foe Outscoring their opponents in all but the last quarter, the Green Dragons of Lorin Andrews junior ligh school Thursday afternoon defeated Alliance State st, 31-23. The Dragons gained a 6-3 edge in the first quarter, made it 15-7 at the half, increased it to 22-10 in the third stanza and added nine points to 13 in the final setto. Bob Clark George Miljanich scored 23 of the winners' points be them. Launer was high for the visitors with nine. The 'game was the Dragons' last until after the Christmas vacation.

The summary: Lorin Andrews Stile St. G. G. F. Clark 4 2 5 Hodgson 0 Alberts 2 0 Guleff 0 OIBrush 1 2 Ashbridge 0 0 Taylor 0 0 Forgan 0 0 Barton 1 2 Miljanich 1 Shcrban 0 0 Wilhelm 0 1 0 Crable 2 0 0 Close 0 Totals 11 Totals Score by quarters: Lorin Andrews 3 1 State st 3 4 3 ILLINI HEADS FOR WEST COAST CHAMPAIGN, 111 44 man Illinois football squad wil leave tonight for Pasadena, Cal.

to meet UCLA in the Rose Bow game on Jan. 1. Coach Ray Eliot selected tnp traveling squad yesterday and pu his men through drills designed to keep their legs in condition The players also rehearsed sonv new plays. The squad will stop over in New Orleans for two hours Saturday and arrive in Pasadena Monday morning. MASSILLON, 0., FRIDAY, DEC.

20, 1946 PAGE 18 Cross to Colgate, with a number of nteresting changes to follow. But athletic dept. hasn't met consider Andy Kerr's successor and Da Grossa isn't ept about what a heck of a cold le picked up on the mashed potato DEER TEACHER Johnny Nelson of Ludlow, N. Y. was reciting in English, class at chool the other day when the eacher interrupted: "Johnny get gun." she wasn't quoting an old song, either Johhny took look, dashed out the back door nd returned with his ritle.

He lid up to the window and bagged an eight-point buck nine deer had wandered into the school yard. ONE-MINUTE SPORTS PAGE The first welterweight title fight on Nat Fleischer's book place 54 years ago this week when mysterious Billy Smith out Danny Needham. Another will take place tonight and t's a good bet that Ray Robinson will knock out Tommy Bell Ace Parker, 33 years old and exacted to retire from pro will get his third shot at major league baseball next spring Because the Cubs need a hard- litting shortstop. Ace led the Piedmont league hitters last summer. ROYALS BOOST LEAGUE LEAD CHICAGO Rochester Royals of the National Basketball stretched their lead in the circuit's eastern division races to Eour and one-half games by defeating Sheboygan 59 to 52 last night, while the second place Fort Wayne Zollners were dropping a 61 to 47 decision to the Syracuse Nationals.

In a third league contest the Anderson, Packers defeated the Buffalo Bisons, 61 to 46. It was Anderson's eighth victory 12 games and Buffalo's eighth loss in 12. Rochester travels to Chicago to meet the American Gears in tonight's only league contest. Tomorrow night, Rochester goes back to Wisconsin to play Oshkosh and Indianapolis is at Youngstown. Their Kovatch leading with 17 Gordonoff with" 10.

scorers were points and B. Storz was high Browns Are Favored By 15.5 Points CLEVELAND, (AP) Every indication but one today pointed to Baltimore as the 1947 home of the orphaned Miami Seahawks of the All- America football conference just two days in advance of the playoff game between the Cleveland Browns and the New York Yankees for the 1946 loop title. The lone indication was the hint from Commissioner James Crowley's headquarters that Hampton Poole, coach of the Florida Sea- hawks during the last half of the present campaign, would represent the franchise in the player draft here Saturday. for the Evangelicals with 13. The game was the, last in the league until Jan.

7. The summary: First Baptists G. Sherrets 4 Simonson 1 F. Kovatch 7 Thomason 3 B. Gordonoff 5 R.

Gordonoff 0 Vasilo 2 Crone 3 Berens 2 St. John's G. F. Ojlmmel 2 IJDobson 2 0 6 OjKent 0 OlMiller OlBordner OlFetzer 01 Totals CROWLEY, a week ago, used $60,000 of league funds to pay" Seahawk debts and announced that the club's fate would be determined at a special meeting of the club owners here Friday. When it became known in Baltimore that Robert Rodenberg of Washington had obtained a football lease on the municipal stadium in the Maryland city for 1947 it was believed that the club would be moved there.

Rodenberg, in Baltimore, intimated yesterday that if his group did acquire the franchise, Poole might not be retained as coach. Other cities in the post-war loop are New York Brooklyn, Buffalo, Cleveland, Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco. Dallas, Boston and Philadelphia also are reported as interested. Other Miami backers are known to be interested in retaining the franchise and there are indications that the holder of the eighth franchise in the young circuit would not be determined until a league business meeting some time next month. However, Baltimore representatives flew here during the night to present their case.

WHILE THE fate of the Sea- hawks occupied most of the official pre-meeting gossip today, the man in the street was primarily concerned with Sunday's game and had installed the Browns as a point favorite over the club the Clevelanders had beaten twice during the regular season. In neither of those defeats were the Yankees able to use Ace Parker, star their single wing backfield who tossed 115 passes during the regular season and had only three intercepted. In addition, the New Yorkers approach a game without a hospital list for the first time, this season. Cleveland, meanwhile, must play with only three regular tackles. Jim Daniell, team captain and star tackle, lost a decision to the Cleveland police last Saturday night and was dismissed from the squad Monday by Coach Paul Brown.

Lou (Golden Toe) Gorza, another tackle who is the conference's leading scorer by virtue of conversions and field goals, is out with injuries leaving only regulars Ernie Blandin, Lou Rymkus and Chet Adams for the vital line spot. Bill Willis, ace Negro lineman, will alternate at tackle and guard. Adams, by coincidence, also takes over Gorza's point kicking duties. Both teams worked out briefly yesterday. Totals 27 Score by quarters: First Baptist 25 8 8 St.

John's Evangelical 15 3 4 13 NEW GOLF PRO SANDUSKY, 0. (AP) Mike Fritz, an army veteran, is the new golf pro at the city-owned Mills Creek course here, succeeding Paul Bertholy, resigned. Fritz twice won the city championship of San dusky. RECAPPING 6.00 16 Hunting Coats Hunting Breeches Hunting Pants Hunting Boots Also Woolrich Coats and Breeches MASSILLON ARMY STORE $7.00 ircstonc U1D SufPir Si STORE' 1004 Lincoln Way, E. What Is The Trouble With Your Brakes? We Know the Answer.

The Strong Auto Supply Co. EXPERT Carburetor and Ignition Repairs WEFLER'S 607 ERIE ST, S. Dial 6000 or 8864 CALL A YELLOW CAB The Cabs With 2-Way Radio. Efficient, Courteous Service. Home Owned Operated.

H. B. ma Christmas Neckwear Featuring the Famous Nor-East Ties at $1.50 The MEEK- SEGNER Co..

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About The Evening Independent Archive

Pages Available:
216,307
Years Available:
1930-1976