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The Billings Gazette from Billings, Montana • 6

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and Billings Gazette, Saturday Morning, November 9, 1957 Two State Witnesses Testify At Assault Trial in Helena HELENA (P Two state nesses in the first-degree assault trial of two 16-year-older Helena differed whethyouths er a teen-age gang was armed with weapons. Both, however, corroborated earlier testimony that two transients were subjected to immoral indignities. Bobby Smith, 15, admittedly one of the teen-agers involved, and Chauncy Davis, 51, one the transients, testified Friday afterin the trial of Richard Shank and Larry Crowl. Shank and Crowl are on trial for first-degree assault upon the other transient, Winford Lee Foster, 47, in a case being heard before' Judge Lester H. Loble in Lewis and Clark County District Court.

Smith said he, as well as Shank and Crowl, were members of a gang that' went railway jungle camp on the night of Oct. 13 to "tease the bums." He also testified that Crowl one of the transients with his fist. On cross examination by defense counsel. Leif Erickson and Patrick Hooks, Smith denied that the youths were carrying weapons. "I didn't see anybody with anything in his hand." he said.

"'The only thing that could be classified as a weapon was the flashlight." Smith also said he did not see any of the group throw Foster over a bank into a gully, as the transient had claimed. Testimony by Davis corroborated that of Foster earlier in the day. He told of immoral indignities imposed upon the pair at the camp fire melee and said he was struck by one youth who had forced him to eat garlic and then said his breath stank. Davis said he saw sticks and clubs in the hands of some of the teen-agers. He identified Shank and Crowl as being present." In response to a question by County Atty.

John C. Harrison, Foster related how he Davis had arrived in Helena early the morning of Oct. 13 from Great Falls. He said they were en route to the Idaho potato harvest. He spoke of events of the day which led up to their going to the Great Northern Railway jungle at Hel- Ike's Scientific (Continued From Page 1.) presentation of the problems." She called this a very gratifying response.

of the telegrams was from the National Security Industrial made up of more than 500 leading corporations in all industrial fields dealing with national defense. The association told Eisenhower it "endorses fully the steps announced by you to relieve national concern regarding the state of our defense program." As for the choice of Killian, the message said "We applaud reaction the Some was mixed, such as that of Sen. Jackson (D-Wash), who has been criticizing the administration on grounds it has woefully and dangerously neglected national defense. Jackson in: a statement had words of praise for Killian, but added: "We still need, and we still do not have, a full time boss for the missiles program at the presidential level. We still need a man given the power, the authority and responsibility required to drive the missiles program forward." Foreign reaction to Eisenhower's speech was generally favorable, but two Japanese newspapers criticized him on the grounds that the emphasis was too much on military power and not on constructive contributions to world peace.

British, West German and French officials expressed endorsement of what Eisenhower had to say, especially his suggestions for allied coordination in scientific research and development. A dissident note came from the Norwegian newspaper Dagbladet which said Eisenhower's speech was lacking in leadership and inspiration. MAKO Hard-Surface Flooring and Wall Tile Pierces FLOORING 3007 Montana Ave. ena planning to take a freight south. Foster said he was reclining on his coat toasting bread for a sandwich when Davis warned, "What is this?" "I raised on my elbow and looked." Foster said.

"One man walked ahead. I just thought maybe some fellows been drinking and the law had given them the run." Foster said a man he identified later as 19-year-old Lyle A Allen, another defendant not now on trial, came into the camp fire area with the others about one-quarter block behind. Said Foster: "I realized we were trouble when a rock came through. I knew it was a gang, a setup. Allen and a couple more grabbed me and threw me over a bank onto boulders.

My knee hit on a boulder. They knocked me over the bank. "They all had weapons but one man, a little short fellow." He estimated the gang at 15 persons or better. Prior to opening. of the morning session, Loble ruled that parents of the two defendants could be in the courtroom even though they may later be called as witnesses.

"It is as important for the parents to hear this as the Loble commented. Foster testified at the morning session that Shank and Crowl were members of the which entered their camp. He some gang, of the youths in the gang admonished others not to harm the men. One of the youths, he said, brought Davis' bedroll him. After incident, he said, the gang ordered him and Davis to leave Helena.

He said it was while was hurrying from the camp fire that one of the gang, a 200- pound youth, hit him across the head with a piece of iron. Conference Slated (Continued From Page 1.) man of the conference, said the junior high school program, special education provisions for mentally and physically handicapped children and teaching methods in reading, writing, grammar, spelling and mathmatics, will be among problems to be aired during the "small group" sessions. "The Saturday conference," said Wold, "will be a good opportunity for those not professionally connected with learn about what is being taught as well as a chance to give their opinions on modern educational trends." Teachers will attend the daylong meeting but Wold said the conference was primarily designed for the layman. He urged any interested persons to attend the meeting. "The greater public participation we have," he said, more successful we will consider our area conference." After luncheon in the school cafeteria, the afternoon conference session will be devoted to what should be taught in high school.

Groups will seek answers to questions concerning mathematics requirements, college preparation and the place of the physical education program in the high school. Each group will present a summary of its findings at the close of the conference. Each conference, in turn, will submit a written report to the state citizens committee and to the curriculum committee appointed by Miss Harriet Miller, state superintendent of public instruction. A statewide report then will be issued, based on opinions developed at the various area conterences. Representatives are expected to attend the Billings conference from Big Horn, Carbon, Treasure, Stillwater, Musselshell, Golden Valley and Yellowstone counties.

Merle Price of Billings, vice chairman the area conference, said all parent teacher association units have been asked to send delegates to the conference and members of the Billings Chamber of Commerce education committee also have been asked to participate. FHA UNIT MEETS FAIRVIEW-A meeting of the Future Homemakers of America was held in the home economics room with Donna Heinle, president, in charge. Plans were made for the annual Christmas Tea Dec. 15. Mrs.

Larry Arpin is the local adviser and Mrs. Peter Heinle and Mrs. Rex Daugherty, chapter mothers. TENDERIZED STEAKS Lb. 59c White or Red, 100 Lbs.

POTATOES Dry Land for $298 BEEF ROAST Lb. 39c EGGS Farm Fresh, Small A 3 Doz. $100 APPLES Roman Beauty, Winesap, Delicious, Jonathan Bu. 52,50 PEANUTS Fresh, Roasted 3 Lbs. $100 GROUND BEEF Pure, Lean 3 Lbs.

95c RANCH MARKET HIGHWAY 10 EAST BILLINGS HEIGHTS "Out Where the Rent Is Low" "JIM" BRASTRUP Open Sundays 8:00 to 8:00 "JOE" STRONG Resident of Sheridan Succumbs at Hospital SHERIDAN, Wyo. -Mrs. Rose Benegalia, wife of Frank Benegalia of Sheridan, died at Sheridan County Memorial Hospital at the age of 85. Mr. and Mrs.

Benegalia were natives of Austria, coming to this country in 1911 and making their home in Sheridan since 1912. Besides her husband she is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Johanna Pierce of Linden, six grandchildren and 10 greatgrandchildren. Judge Outraged By Acquittal SAN FRANCISCO (U.P)-A fedjury of 10 men and two Friday Roland E. acquitted Simcox Army of mutineer Columbus, Ohio, of a charge of murdering a fellow convict at Alcatraz Federal Prison.

It was the second time the 25- year innocent old in convict connection has been with found knifings on "The Rock" prison and the jury drew a tongue lashing from Federal Judge Oliver D. Hamlin for the verdict. The jury ruled that Simcox, known as "the second toughest man on Alcatraz," acted in selfdefense when he knifed to death his former prison buddy, Edward H. Gauvin, 23, last June 6. He was similarly acquitted last year of a charge of assaulting convict Floyd on New Year's Eve, 1955.

Mann did not die. Judge Hamlin, obviously outraged by the jury's action, dismissed the panel from any further federal court stating the verdict "put the jury system in disrepute." "I would like to state to you, ladies and gentlemen of the jury, I do not believe the verdict is based on credible evidence in the case," he said. "I believe it will undoubtedly increase custodial problems at Alcatraz. I further believe verdicts of this kind tend put the jury system in disrepute." Simcox was immediately returned to his cell at the island prison where he still faces imprisonment until 1995 for wartime mutiny in Korea. Jury Foreman John W.

Livermore of Oakland told newsmen he believed Judge Hamlin's remarks were "unfair." He said the jury had considered the possibility of a manslaughter verdict, but had never considered first-degree murder. "The crux of this case selfdefense," he said. "It was my feeling that the number of threats through the past months by this boy killed created the right for this boy (Simcox) to defend himself." Gauvin was stabbed with a crude prison-made knife while he and Simcox and a number of other convicts were in a shower dressing room. Simcox was defended by Attorney Jack L. Burnam of San Francisco, the same lawyer who won him acquittal in the previous trial.

Power Failure Is Investigated Electric service to 40 west Billings homes was interrupted about 40 minutes early Friday night by a power failure of undetermined origin. Max Mathews of Huntley, manager of the Yellowstone Valley Electric Co-Op, said the power was restored by means of circuit-breaker equipment at the company's Mossmain substation. Mathews said the failure may have resulted from an auto accident early Friday near Central Avenue and 24th Street West. In that crash, a car driven by Dean A. Piper, 34, of Laurel smashed head-on into a utility pole.

Workmen were assigned to the utility pole to see if it had collapsed. Worker Is Killed In Dome Collapse MELROSE PARK, Ill. (U.P)-The steel dome of a huge water reservoir collapsed Friday, hurling one man to his death and trapping workmen in the wreckage. Police and firemen from three suburban Chicago towns cut loose five trapped workmen with acetylene torches. They were hospitalized, along with three other injured men.

Two of them were reported in serious condition. Rescue workers continued digging for about an hour longer until authorities were sure no workmen had been overlooked. The dead man was identified as Leonardis Hale of Indianapolis, Ind. At least 15 men were on top of the empty, 4-million gallon reservoir, pouring concrete, when the dome collapsed. The weight of the concrete, plus high winds raking the structure, probably contributed to the breakdown, authorities said.

Plan Polio Clinic WINNETT The Winnett Parent-Teacher Assn. is planning to cooperate with county officials in arranging a clinic for third polio shots for youth of the area. The first two such clinics were well attended and it is time for the third and final injection of Salk vaccine. Solon Praises NATO Outlook Anderson Finds Nations United Rep. LeRoy Anderson of Montana's Second Congressional Disthe Reserve Officers Friday trict told the Billings Chapter, of night that North Atlantic Treaty Organization countries in Europe are determined to resist their neighbors behind the Iron Curtain.

Anderson recently toured the NATO countries in his role as a major general and commander of the 96th Infantry Division of the U.S. Army Reserve, to which many Montana units belong. The congressman said NATO nations are meeting manpower commitments "but cannot meet all equipment commitments. The United States must help by providing them with special weapons, he asserted. At present, he said, Germany is the only NATO member "able to march fully alongside the United States." Anderson said he found the "cold war" in Europe colder than ever.

"The Russians are actually constructing a 10 10-foot wooden and fence along the Czech border," he said. The congressman said the United States must counter objections to foreign aid by making public what he termed "the true situation in Europe." Discussing the missile development race, he believes the United "States will outdistance the Russians within the next few months. Anderson urged more careful screening of American military reserve forces to stretch defense dollars as far as possible. Anderson spoke at a dinner meeting in the Turf Penthouse. He and Mrs.

Anderson will attend the ROA military ball Saturday night. Judge Addresses (Continued From Page 1.) the Federal Bureau of Investigation admits that every delinquent who graduates to the penitentiary has cost society $40,000, At the banquet John Cavan, chairman, presented a plaque to Gov. J. Hugo Aronson for his interest in the welfare of youth in Montana. In accepting plaque the governor praised the work agencies in Billings in behalf of youth and said that he wished Montanans had been equally interested in the welfare of youth when the young Aronson arrived in the state from Sweden.

"But it out all right," the governor worked, Also receiving plaques from Louis Kramp, guidance council counselor, were members of the executive board Dr. Robert Hagstrom, Noel Rigby, Ralph Craig and Donald Nash. Con Kelleher, toastmaster, introduced as guests of the council Rep. and Mrs. LeRoy H.

Anderson, Mayor and Mrs. Earle, Knight, Judge and Mrs. Jameson, Judge Guy C. Derry and his daughter, Mrs. Edith Kelly, Judge and Mrs.

E. E. Fenton, Judge and Mrs. W. R.

Flachsenhar of Forsyth and Judge W. W. Lessley of Bozeman. Also honored were Mr. and Mrs.

Irving Staid, Mr. and Mrs. William R. Beam, Mr. and Mrs.

W. G. Baldridge, Mrs. Hagstrom, Mr. and Mrs.

Joseph Sample and Mr. and Mrs. Cavan. Introduced were members of the governor's advisory, committee on child They are Mrs. John Leuthold of Molt, Mrs.

Marian Anderson of Butte, Mrs. Kathryn Sinclair Helena, Mrs. Harry Roe of Billings, R. L. Robbins of Glendive and J.

M. Smith of Helena. Ralph Craig, president of the council, briefly recalled the history of the organization and pointed out that while juvenile delinquency had increased 17 per cent nationally during the last three and a half years it declined almost 22 per cent in Billings. He attributed this achievement to the cooperation of all the agencies in the city which concern themselves with the welfare of youth. Organ music was played by Miss Myrna McNeill and vocalists were Dr.

and Mrs. Philip Turner. They were accompanied by Mrs. Beam. Welfare Workers Forego Lunch To Meet Clients NEW PORT, R.

I. (P The 11- member staff of the Newport WelDept. not only foregoes coffee breaks, but even remains in the office during lunch hours. Director Helen C. McLeish reported Thursday: "The staff prefers remaining in the office during lunch hours as many of the clients contact the staff at that time." Man Loses 'Good' Car in Crash; Still Has Spare COLUMBUS, N.

J. (A Walter B. Bowne will have to drive his "work vehicle" from now on. His "good car" was wrecked Thursday night. Bowne's 1923 Star had its body ripped from the chassis when another vehicle smashed into its rear.

The 68-year-old electrician escaped, with a lamented, few cuts. they don't make them the way they used to, and the Star was a "good car." Bowne said it 1922 Model As for his wawork Ford. Highway Contracts Let by Commission CHEYENNE (P Contracts totaling $4,544,372 were awarded by the Wyoming Highway Commission Thursday on 21 road- projects. Bids were opened earlier Thursday. of contracts were conditional.

They are: Reeves Bros. of Douglas for $12.493 for pit run shale base course and other work on 5 miles of the Sundance-Moorcroft county road in Crook county; and Eagle Construction Co. of Loveland for $101,888 for construction of a bridge over Crow Creek as part of the Cheyenne urban system. Rites Are Planned For Worland Man WORLAND, Wyo. Funeral services for James Dennis Bledsoe, 35, chief operating engineer at the Texas Gulf Sulphur Plant in Worland, will be at 11 a.m.

Saturday in the Veile Mortuary. The Rev. Julius Berkenkamp will officiate, and burial will be in Riverview Cemetery. Mr. Bloedsoe died of a heart attack Thursday at his home.

He was born at Henryetta, Dec. 12, 1921. came to Worland eight years ago and had been employed with Texas Gulf Sulphur since then. He married Frances Louise Sherron on Sept. 6, 1947, in Henryetta.

He was a member of Worland Lodge 1908, BPOE. Surviving besides his wife are a daughter, Patricia two sons, James Michael Bledsoe, 6, and Robert Willis Bledsoe. his father, James Willis Bledsoe of Henryetta; two sisters, Mrs. Joe Brown of Pasadena, and Mrs. Maud Peckinpaugh of Albuquerque, N.M.

Route 30 Patrol To Be Continued; CHEYENNE (P Operation 60, the program of continuous patrolling of U. S. Highway 30 in southern Wyoming, will be continued indefinitely, Col. William R. Bradley said Thursday.

The Highway Patrol chief told the Wyoming Highway Commission there has been "a noticeable improvement in traffic control since the plan started July 29." Bradley said the program put the patrolmen on the road and in view of the traveling public. "violations of speed, improper passing and driving while intoxicated were all Bradley said. Operation 60 requires 21 patrolmen to concentrate their time on U. S. 30.

During daylight hours they patrol 50 mile long strips of road. At night the beats are doubled. The program was initiated by Gov. Milward L. Simpson after a rash of fatal accidents along the highway in southern Wyoming during July.

TO MAKE REPORT CHEYENNE (P- Gov. Milward L. Simpson said Friday he had been asked to report to the White House ea Conference on Highway Safety on Operation 60, the beat patrolling of U. S. Highway 30 across southern Wyoming.

The conference will be held in Washington Dec. 9-10. Defense Secretary (Continued From Page 1.) stage rocket engine to the Cape Canaveral, missile test center last summer for a flight test. But it was not until Oct. 23 that the first stage was fired.

The device reached an altitude of 109 miles, with a peak velocity 4,250 miles per hour, falling into the sea 328 miles off the Florida coast. At Redstone Arsenal Friday night there was a hurried huddle of Dr. Wernher von Braun, the former German V2 expert who has pioneered the Army's ballistic miswork, Dr. Ernst Stuhlinger, and the whole missile staff of the arsenal. Stuhlinger is the second ranking civilian after Von Braun and is a nuclear physicist.

The Jupiter- test vehicle program is a joint project of the ArBallistic Missile Agency and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory of the California Institute of Technology. Dr. William Pickering, director of the laboratory, joined in the Redstone Arsenal meeting of Army officials Friday night. Seek Navy Family HELENA (P) The Navy is conducting a survey in Montana to find the family with the largest number of sons and daughters in the naval service. The Navy also is seeking the numbers of brothers, sisters and parents on active duty with the Navy.

The Navy recruiters say the survey will continue one more week. HEAR P-TA REPORT FAIRVIEW -A report of the district meeting of the ParentTeacher was given by Ernest Desonia at a meeting of the local unit. Mrs. John Hardy, president, conducted the meeting. Don Peterson, program chairman, divided the group into sections and a topic for discussion was given each section.

OBTAIN LICENSE SHERIDAN, riage license the office clerk to 20, Hardin, May Cooley, Notre Dame-Michigan State Contest Rated Top Game Today By HUGH FULLERTON JR. The Associated Press During the ten years the Notre Dame-Army football rivalry, was allowed to cool off, Fighting Irish, shorn of their subway alumni, installed Michigan State as their big rival. The 24th meeting between the Irish and Michigan State's Spartans Saturday fully deserves the Big Game designation. For one thing, it marks the beginning of one of the toughest assignments ever handed a college team. After meeting Michigan State, currently ranked fourth in the nation in The Associated Press poll, Notre Dame will go up against Oklahoma, No.

2, and then Iowa, No. 5, on the next two Saturdays. The game will be played before a capacity crowd for the ninth year in a row--a 76.000 sellout in Michigan State's double-decked Spartan stadium. Michigan State, climbing back after a mid-season defeat by Purdue, is favored in this game and a strong contender for the Big Ten title. Notre Dame, thumped by Navy last week after unexpectedly winning its first four games, needs a victory in at least one of these three tough games to salvage a satisfactory As a gate attraction or as a struggle for national honors, the Notre Dame-Michigan State game ranks alongside Saturday's other tussles involving top teams.

And six of the teams listed in the first ten face spoilers who could wreck conference championship prospects. The tough Texas Aggies, heading the rankings for the second week, encounter Southern Methodist. Oklahoma's team, apparentsomewhat below its 1956 championship level, plays Missouri. Deno fense-minded Auburn, No. 3, is challenged by Mississippi State for the Southeastern Conference lead.

Iowa, the defending Big Ten champion which tied Michigan last week, now runs against rugged Minnesota. Ohio State, leading the Ten, encounters the Purdue team which dropped Michigan State and Illinois. Tennessee, once more a Southeastern contender since Bobby Gordon has blossomed out as a tailback, runs into an improving Georgia Tech team that manhandled Duke last week. Navy, Army and North Carolina State, rated 7. 8 and 10, respectively, aren't risking any kind of championships.

Triumphant Navy encounters embittered Duke at Baltimore; Army plays the nation's passingest team, Utah. N. C. State appears a bit too strong for William and Mary. Although Oklahoma has won 46 consecutive games and hasn't lost in 63 straight Big Eight contests, Coach Bud Wilkinson has said both strings may be ended by Missouri.

A victory likely would send the once-beaten, once-tied Tigers to the Orange Bowl. The surprising Oregon team also is shooting for a bowl spot against Washington. A victory would assure the Webfoots of at least a tie in the Pacific Coast Conference and probably the Rose Bowl Ivy the League lead im- is at Tigers play proving Harvard, and Miami (Ohio) and Marshall, both unbeaten in the Americans Conference, fight place. mid Other top pairings in various sections include: East Pittsburgh-West Virgin- Chiefs Battle Polson Pirates to 13-13 Tie in Title Contest ia, Columbia-Dartmouth, CornellBrown, PennSouth Mississippi-Louisiana State, Florida Georgia, AlabamaTulane, Vanderbilt Kentucky, Clemson-Maryland, North Carolina-South Carolina. Midwest Illinois-Michigan, North we ester Iowa State-Nebraska, Kansas- a as State, Oklahoma State-Wyoming.

Southwest ic e-Arkansas, Arizona State-Texas Western. Far West Air Force-Denver, Colorado State University-Colorado, Utah State Idaho, Montana California-Oregon State, Southern California-St a n- ford, Washington State- LA, Fresno State-Brigham Young. Mike Souchak, Littler Lead LONG BEACH, Calif. (U.P.) Big Mike Souchak and little Gene Littler, a pair of golfdom's more consistent performers, battled the Lakewood Country Club and its attendant distractions for fiveunder-par 66s to take the firstday lead in the $11,500, 54-hole Long Beach open golf tournament Friday. Both men, among the better of the younger crop of golfers, had identical 33-33 cards to take a one-stroke lead over a tightlypacked field.

This is a short course (6,235 yards) and the professionals were supposed to rip it apart. But they didn't take into consideration such distractions as the Douglas Aircraft Plant next door, a highway that runs down the middle of the course and airplanes buzzing the field from overhead. But Littler and Souchak had steady nerves. They didn't crack under the strain, although Souchak came close. On the sixth tee a powerful jet engine was being tested within a few hundred feet of the golfers.

Mike took a stand as the jet continued to roar. He waggled his club. "Then just as I started by backswing, the shattering noise quit. It was so still and I was so stunned that I dropped my club," said Souchak. With such distractions, it was a remarkable performance.

Littler had six birdies and single bogey. He had nine threes on his card. The Diego star's only mistake was a three-putt job on the fifth hole. He putted for birdies on every green, Souchak didn't have a single bogey. He had five, birdies, all coming with putts 10 feet or less.

Right behind this pair came three Los Angelenos. Ronnie Nicol. Jerry Barber and Tommy Bolt, were next in line with fourunder-par 67s. And at 68 came Babe Lichardus, Hillside, N.J., Bob Toski, South Miami, Dale Andreason, Pittsburgh (who had the only eagle of the day); Cliff Whittle, Twin Falls, Billy Booe, Bridgeport, Billy Casper, San Diego; Eric Monti, Los Angeles; and Howie Johnson, Akron, 0. RONAN (P The Ronan Chiefs and Polson Pirates battled to a 13-13 stalemate in the championship football game of the Class Northwestern Division Friday night.

Ronan scored in the first and third quarters, Polson in the second and fourth. The final touchdown and missed extra point came in the last three minutes of play. Sputnik Dog Believed Dead MOSCOW (U.P.) The official Soviet report on Sputnik II Friday made no mention of its dog passenger, leading observers to believe the world's first space traveler might be dead in the metal container whirling around the earth. Laika, the 40-pound arctic sledge dog encased in the half-ton shell was alive Thursday, five days after the satellite was shot 1,056 miles into space. But apparently the dog's life began ebbing.

The Tass News Agency report Thursday said scientists were receiving data only on the animal's main physiological functions. Observers interpreted the agency's failure to mention Laika Friday to mean scientists received nothing from the transmitters attuned to the dog. There had been reports shortly after the launching last Sunday that efforts would be made to bring the dog back to earth alive. Even dead, the body would be of value to scientists studying the effects of such space phenomena as cosmic rays on flesh and blood. Educator Expects Speedy Red Chinese Progress SAN FRANCISCO UP Dr.

David G. Mandelbaum, University of California anthropologist, predicts Communist China's scientific development "will in all probability be greater than that in Soviet Russia." Dr. Mandelbaum, speaking at the sixth national UNESCO conference, said: "It is a reasonable guess that China will catch up with Russia in much less than 40 years" the time elapsed since the Communists came to power in Russia. NOW You Can Rent MIXERS by the Day Week Month Here's How You Save: No original investment to make. You may choose size and style.

No maintenance on your part. Rent only when needed. Immediately available. RENTAL EQUIPMENT CO. 4015 1st Ave.

So. Ph. 3-3093 BARGAIN CITY Has Moved TO A NEW LOCATION! at 2704 Minnesota Avenue BARGAIN CITY PRICES HAVE MOVED CHEST, UPRIGHT FREEZERS Special Low Prices on: 0 TV SETS RANGES DRYERS WASHERS RADIO- PHONOGRAPHS EASY TERMS-MONTHS TO PAY! EVERY PRICE A BARGAIN! MANY MODELS GUARANTEED! BARGAIN CITY "Used Appliance Specialists" 2704 Minnesota Avenue Phone 9-7523 OPEN WEEKDAY' EVENINGS TILL 7:30 Wyo. A marhas been issued at of the Sheridan county Rudolph Charles Colin, and Melvina 17, Dayton..

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