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Detroit Free Press from Detroit, Michigan • Page 54

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Detroit, Michigan
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54
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2-D Sunday, April 25. '65 DETROIT FREE PRESS ILyali niitli White Sox Catch Nats In Pinch Swingin' Gates Ruins Twins Aau Horses Taking Over The City of Cars it's possible that Swift" will 'give Brown his first start of the year. "I didn't think he'd call on 'me 'there in the ninth," he saki. NO. 1 APPRENTICE? Jockeys' room custodian John Danagher (left) wonders if young Charles Baltazar will be the top apprentice jockey at the Hazel Park meet opening Monday.

Baltazar rode his first winner at the Detroit Race Course last summer, but he'll have plenty of competition here with a bumper crop of promising newcomers. STRENGTH IN NUMBERS Is This the Year Rookies Take Over at Hazel Park? Continued from First Sports ninth with a drive into the up- per leftfield deck. That tied it 4-4. Then Brown hit a towering drive into the upper deck in right with McAuliffe and Jerry Lumpke on base via walks and the Tigers scored a victory that seemed beyond their grasp. They hit four homers alto- geuier, wun uon jjemeier con necting ahead of Horton in the seventh, and the triumph enaea I Minnesota's five-game winning streak.

BROWN AND Horton are pair of innocent young men and neither was looking to hit a home run. Of course not. "I was just trying for base hits," said Willie, shaking his head In awe of his own power. "I knew I'd hit both of them good but I was only trying to get on base." Brown sat in front of his locker and he, too, couldn't quite believe what had happened. He hit a 1-0 pitch off Alan Worthington and said he hadn't intended to swing at all.

"I figured I'd take a strike but changed my mind at the last second," Brown said with a smile. At the outset of spring training, Brown was considered the No. 1 leftfielder on the Tigers. He thought so, anyway. So did a lot of other people.

HE HAD PLAYED more games in left than anyone else: last season 106 and hit a solid .272 with 15 homers and 54 runs batted in. But he seldom got a chance to play in Florida. Northrup and Horton split the job mostj of the time while Gates was reduced to the status of a pinch-hitter. It almost seemed as if Swift (and possibly Charlie Dressen, too) had a pre-con- ceived idea that Brovn just couldn't cut it in leftfield. So Gates was asked about it, how he felt about being shunted to the side without getting a chance to keep his job.

"No comment," he said. 'Maybe I can help the team this way by pinch hitting." He was asked if this was enough to satisfy him. "I'm on the team, ain't he said. "That's enough of a reason to be happy." 1 Which shows that this lad has come a long, long way. WITH CAMILO Pascual set to pitch for the Twins Sunday, i I a "This is going to be an apprentices' year," said racing official Bill Cole, now an entry clerk at the 84-day meet open- ing Monday.

FEW PEOPLE ARE in a better position to judge than Bill. For many seasons he was a jockey agent at the Detroit BY AL COFTMAX With its short straightaways and shorter turns, Hazel Park is hardly the race track for a green jockey to get started. Over the years, apprentice riders have taken a back seat to the veterans at the five-eighths' mile track, but this season may be different. WASHINGTON, D.C. (LTD Floyd Robinson's three-run homer climaxed a five-run seventh inning outbreak Saturday that enabled the Chicago White Sox to sweep from behind and beat the Washington Senators, 6-2.

The big inning also saw three Chicago pinch-hitters Tom McCraw, J. C. Martin and Smokey Burgess come through with key hits. McCraw singled with one out and Martin doubled him home. After Danny Cater got a hit, Burgess singled in Martin to tie the contest, 2-2.

CHICAGO ab bi ab bi Cater tf 5 110 Bl's'amf 7b 4 0 1 0 Buford 2b Burgess ph Weis or-2b Rob'son rf Ward 3b Skowron lb Romano Wilhelm Hansen ss Berry cf McCraw cf B.Howard Martin 3 0 0 0 McMuMen 3b 4 1 0 0 10 11 King rf 3 10 0 1 109 F.Howard If 4 0 0 0 2 12 3 5 0 10 5 0 10 Chance lb 3 0 3 0 Lock cf 4 0 0 0 Brumlev e- 3 0 0 0 Br'kman ss 2 0 0 0 Narum 2 0 0 0 Kirkl'nd Dh 10 0 0 2 0 0 0 10 0 0 5 0 10 10 0 0 12 10 10 0 0 2 12 1 Totals 35 i 10 5 Totals 30 2 4 0 Chicago 000 000 510- Washington 000 200 000 -2 Ward. Narum. DP Chicago, 1. Washington 2. LOB Chicago 10, Washington 4.

2B Skowron, Martin, Ward. HR Robinson (1). IP ER BB SO B.Howard 1-0 6 2 2 0 16 Wilhelm 3 2 0 0 1 2 Narum 1-2 6 1-3 7 4 4 5 3 Kline 2-3 2 1 1 1 0 Green 2-3 1 1 1 2 1 Willhite 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 HBP By B. Howard King. Balk Green.

PB Martin 2. 2:40. A 2,447. Bosox Win in 12th BALTIMORE Lee Thomas slammed a three-run homer, his fourth hit of the game, into the rightfield bleachers in the 12th inning and powered the Boston Red Sox to a 7-5 victory over Baltimore Saturday. Dick Radatz got the victory with six innings of one-hit relief pitching.

The lone hit off Radatz was Jackie Brandt's leadoff homer in the bottom of the 12th. BOSTON BALTIMORE bl ab bi Green cf 5 12 0 Ballr cf Malzone 3b 6 14 0 Aparlcio ss Yastr'skl 1f 6 2 3 1 Powell If C'nigi'ro rf 5 2 1 1 Rob'son 3b Thomas lb 6 14 3 Siebern lb. Mantilla 2b 6 0 2 2 Belfary rf Tillman 6 0 0 0 Orsino Petroc'li ss 4 0 10 Adair 2b Geiger pf 1 0 0 0 PaDDas Bressoud ss 0 0 0 0 Row Wilson ,2 0 0 0 Snyder ph Radatz 2 0 0 0 Lau Dh Miller Brandt ph 5 0 0 0 6 0 2 1 5 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 110 4 2 11 5 12 1 0 0 0 0 10 11 10 0 0 10 0 0 1 A ft ft i i i Boston ooo ooo oo3-7 020 010 100 0015 Betarv 2. Yastrzemki riP-BnlMi' 1, Baltimore 2. LOB-Boston 9 Baltimore 6.

2B Green, Mantilla, Adair, Yastrzem-ski, Malzone. HR Orsino (2), Thomas (3), BranOt U). wiison. IP Wilson 6 7 Radatz W. 2-1 6 1 PaDpas 1-3 5 Rowe 4 2-3 7 Starrette 2 1 Miller 0-2 5 4 Wilson faced 1 man In 7th.

3:18. ER BB SO 4 1 3 1 3 4 2 0 0 1 0 1 i 1 3 6 Indians Win, 4-1 CLEVELAND UPI Fred Whitfield's single drove in the tie-breaking run in a three-run eighth-inning rally that gave the Cleveland Indians a 4-1 victory over Kansas City Saturday. IfANtAC CITY CLEVELAND ab rum di C'pan'rls If 3 0 11 Howser ss 2 0 0 0 Causev ss 4 0 2 0 Hmton 2b H'beraer rf 4 0 0 0 Wagner If Gentile lb 4 0 10 Colavito rf Charles 3b 4 0 0 0 Luolow rf Bryan 3 10 0 Alvis 3b Landis cf 1 0 0 0 Davalillo cf Mathews cf 3 0 2 0 Whitfield lb Green 2b 4 0 0 0 Carreon rirah'liv 2 0 0 0 Terry 4 0 0 0 4 110 2 0 10 0 0 0 0 2 10 0 4 10 0 3 12 2 1 0 0 Reynolds ph 0 0 0 0 Barker ph Totals 32 1 6 1 Totals 28 4 3 Kansas City 000 OOO 100 1 Cleveland 000 001 03x-4 Charles. Kansas City 1. LOB Kansas City 7.

Cleveland 10. 2B Causev, Gentile, Mathews, Colavito SB Wagner. Howser, Carreon. Terry. SF Whitfield, Camoaneris.

IP ER BB SO Drabowsky 6 3 115 4 Talbot 0-1 2 3 3 3 3 0 Terry 2-1 8 6 1 1 2 4 Bell 1 0 0 0 0 0 uraoowsKy ra Dryan. 2:48. A 4,088. Reds Pound Cards CINCINNATI (UPD Frank Robinson hit two home runs and Vada Pinson one to give the I Napoleon Leads Mets to Victory A WHEEL OF FORTUNE STARTS SPINNING Monday afternoon out at a local horse-parlor that is sometimes referred to as an annex of the U.S. mint when it isn't called the Hazel Park race track.

The wheel plus horses and bettors will go around and around and around and around. And just like Major Bowes, the old pitchman of the airways, used to intone: "Where it'll stop, nobody knows. It has been just 30 years since the horses first started running here. In those days, the only track was out at the State Fair Grounds. In that third season of parimu-tuel racing here they ran just 68 days, drew 220,000 customers and handled $7,500,000 worth of folding green.

That was horse racing here, period. A season of only 68 days, an average turnout of 3,230 and a daily average of $110,000 shoved through the betting windows. What has happened since then Js fantastic. The future? Stick around. Monday's Hazel Park opener is the klckoff of the 1965 running season.

They'll spin around HP's five-eights of a mile track for 84 days until Saturday, July 31. Two days later, bettors will flock over to the Detroit Race Course on the other side of town to try to get even. They'll have another 84 days to do it. Post Time, iglit aud Day ADD 'EM TOGETHER AND IT MEANS that runners will be running, bettors will be betting, winners will be winning and losers will be shaking their heads for a record total of 168 afternoons. That's all daytime stuff.

They're already trotting and pacing under the lights and have been since March 6. They won't stop until Nov. 27 and that's a total of 210 nights. Then there is a stirring across the river over in Wind- sor, where construction of another race strip is under- Dates already have been allocated. They start Oct.

14 and keep going until a couple of weeks before Christmas total of 58 nights, thanks to items like heated grandstands and a sort of drip-dry I stuff on which the races can be run regardless of weather conditions. Let's see now, where are we? If they run 168 days and trot 210 nights here, plus 58 more in neighboring Windsor, the horse aficionado hereabouts finally will have reached his millenium. There are only 365 days in a year. But horses will be running and trotting a total of 436 days and nights in that same year and if you want to expand just a little bit, tack on 88 additional days down at Toledo. That gets a fellow up to 524 days if he can stand the pace of burning his paycheck at both ends by getting paid for working 365 days and betting on a total of 524.

Handle Goes Up as Hots Co Down IT'S IMPOSSIBLE, OF COURSE, but it shows how horses are thriving in an area better known for items of horsepower. Back in 1949 and that's only 16 years ago when Hazel Park first got into the act, it drew 408,000 fans and handled $18 million in bets over a 46-day season. Last summer it drew 856,000 fans who bet $59,835,000 In 72 days. That means attendance doubled and betting tripled out there in 16 years although just 26 days were added to the original 46-day season. The other half of the local daily double the Detroit Race Course was just as busy last summer when it drew 841,000 fans and counted a total handle of $56 million.

And where do we go from here Well, they're making inquiries just asking, you un-l derstand, nothing at all definite about what it would cost to build a dome over the track out at Hazel Park. The general idea seems to be to make it possible for horese to run and fans to bet in air-conditioned andor heated comfort all year around. It's an intriguing thought. Even if a domed track would put an end to the old betting cry: "The sky's the limit." Ex-Aide Given Kansas Track Job LAWRENCE, Kan. Bob Timmons, 40, forme Kansas assistant and high school coach of Olympic miler Jim Ryun, was hired' Saturday as head track coach at Kansas succeeding Bill Easton.

(tf) Pinch hitter Danny Napoleon triple with two out in the ninth SAN FRANCISgO- slammed a bases-loaded tracks and he is still remembered as the man who introduced Sherman Armstrong back in 1950. Armstrong, now a trainer at Hazel Park, ranked with the leaders in '50 and '51 in such capable apparentice company as John Nazareth, George Walker, Russ Gaudreau. Tommy Cafarelli, George Walker and Earl Van Hook. When Sherm was breaking in, he had to contend with veterans like L. C.

Cook, W. M. Cook, Dick Lawless and Tommy Barrow. Only Lawless is still around and, starting next week, he'll be riding against one of Armstrong's proteges, Detroiter Jerry Kotenko. Jerry rode a handful of races in i last season, but didn't pick up his first winners until he hit Maryland this spring.

While Kotenko has shown promise, he won't have the apprentice field to himself. As Cole pointed out, there are more first-rate "bug boys" around than in many a year. THERE'S Charles Baltazar, who broke in at the Detroit Race Course last summer and is still cleaning up while he has his five-pound apprentice allowance. He's with a live-wire outfit trained by Bryan Webb, and together they piled up a lot of winners at New Orleans during the winter. inning that brought the New York Mets their second straight; viotnrv nvpr Ran Francisco 7-fi Satnrrlav I The Mets, who overcame an aeticu.

lo oeieat iie o-iants, 9-8, in 11 innings Friday, trailed San Francisco. 6-4 cmnr into the ninth inmng. Charlie Smith beat out a bunt to 'thing's started, and one iiout later, utins uonruzzaro reached base on an error by re-jt Hever Bob Shaw. Pinch hitter Warren Spahn grounded out, but Johnny Lewis walked, filling the bases. km wmm Brown's homer made Larry Sherry the winner.

Sherry relieved in the ninth when the Twins nudged ahead. Phil Regan had pitched -the first eight innings and settled down after a shaky he was lifted when Rich "Rol gj. nmth on en to lead off the McAuliffe's throwing error and Don Mincher followed with a pinch single, past Norm Cash at first John Seale was summoned to Ditch to Sandv Valdespino. the Twins'. 5-foot-5 outfielder.

Valdespino cracked a liner to left to score Rollins with the tying run, and Joe oNs-sek, running for Mincher, came in with the go-ahead run on Tony Oliva's sacrifice fly off Sherry. Jerry Fosnow, Minnesota's rookie lefthander, started the ninth and Horton hit his first pitch into the balcony in left. McAuliffe drew a one-out walk and then stole second-with two out. Jerry Lumpe --was walked and Worthington. Jlhe winner of Friday night's game, came in to face Brown.

Brown didn't like his assignment tpo well. "That Worthington," he said later, "he used to give "me trouble, trouble, trouble' in the American Association. He threw me nothing but sliders, sliders, sliders." So what did Gates 7. Well, it wasn't a screw-hall. ED, HAVE YCU MET OUR RED WING DEALER? for WORK' sport: LEISURE See your Red Wing Dealer arid try on a pair.

Sizes 616, AA-EEE. Write us for his name. RED WING SHOE COMPANY Red Wing, Minnesota OO When we paint your, 4 p.m. Sat. a.m.

to 12 noon FERNDALE 834 East Milr LINCOLN PARK 2048 Dix Ave. GRAND RAPIDS LI 8-7300 DU 2-4390 445 Michigan Ave. E. GL 1-0445 INSTALLATION I I WITH ANY I PAINT JOB Tifins-Tl ami Ranlix CHICAGO UP) Ernie Banks drove in two runs and increased his National League leading runs-batted-in total to 14 as the Chicago Cubs defeated Milwaukee, 3-1. Saturday.

Banks' single brought in two df Chicago's three runs in the fourth after Tony Clonlnger had held the Braves hitless over the first three innings. 7- 1 MONDAY THROUGH MONDAY cm mo la fa ic sxafsa 111, troit River in the Class A elimi- HOUSTON ifl Home runs, nations of the Midwest Din-by Bob Aapromonte and Jim phy championships to qualify Wynn backed Dick FarreU's for the Midwest finals, May 8-seven-hit pitching aa the -at Kent State, ton Astros blanked the Pitts-1 Wayne nipped Kent State, burgh Pirates. 5-0, Saturday 131-30. with U-D third with 26 Cincinnati Reds a 6-3 victory J0 3 Saturday over the St. tt-o 0002 Cardinals.

I 2:47. a Sammy Ellis, getting a ninth inning assist from lefty Billy McCool, picked up the victory, his third straight. ct 1 cm IS CINCINNATI ab Bi Flood cf 1 9 W05e 2b 1 1 Brock If Groat ss White lb Spiezio 3b Franc'na rt Gagliano 2b McC'ver Stallard Skinner ph Warwick ph Totals 3 10 0 Harper If ,1 ig Pinson cf a Rob'son rf Coleman lb Johnson 3b. 1 3 112 3 2 2 3 4 0 0 0 i 5 I I 4 0 10 a i i- Pav'tich i Cardenas 4 0 2 0 pin 2 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 0000 SS Tstali Mill 33 3 7 2 A NEW YORK SAN ab bi francisco' abrh bi Lewis rf M'Millan ss N'poleon 3b Kranep'l lb Chr toph'r If Hickman cf Gonder ph 4 2 10 Peqn is Slip 3 10 0 A lot) If 512 0 4010 I 2 10 13 4 2 2 2 3 0 10 3 0 0 1 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 12 1 3 0 0 0 10 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 10 0 0 10 0 0 10 0 0 McCovey Mays ct lb J.Alou rf Hart 3b Davenp't 3b Haller Lanier 2b Cowan cf Smith 3b Klaus 2b Jones cf iCniz'aro (Jackson pr Taylor Parsons Sanford Shaw totals Swoboda ph Kroil Spahn ph totals 35 7 7 7 New York 201 ooi oo37: San Francisco 013 000 02O-6 McCovey, Shaw, Klaus. Taylor.

LOB New York 5, San Francisco 8. 2B Mays. 3B Napoleon. HR Krane- pool 2 (3). SB Mays.

McMillan, J. aiou IP ER BB SO Parsons 4 7 4 4 0 0 Kroll 2-0 4 4 2 2 I 3 Ribant 1 1 0 0 0 0 Sanford 7 2-3 5 4 2 2 i Shaw 0-1 1 2 3 0 1 0 Hendley 1-3 0 0 0 0 HBP By Kroll, McCovey. PB Cannli- 0iaro. MILWAUKEE CHICAGO ab bl ab bi Cline rf Maye cf Mathews 5 0 10 4 0 10 3 110 4 0 0 0 4 0 10 2 0 0 1 4 0 0 0 3 0 2 0 10 0 0 10 0 0 10 0 0 10 10 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 34 1 7 1 Beckert 2b 4 0 0 0 2 10 0 3 110 3 12 1 3 0 0 0 4 0 4 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 Pena ss Williams cf Santo 3b Altman If Banks lb Clemens rf Bertell Buhl 3b Oliver Jones If Alou lb Menke ss Bollina 2b Kolb ph Cloninq'r Klimch'k ph H.Aaron Dh Alomar ph Torre ph Totals Totals Milwaukee 000 001 0001 Chicago OOO 300 OOx 3 Fischer, Santo. LOB Milwaukee 9.

Chicago 8. SB Pena. SF Alou. IP ER BB SO Clooinaer 1-2 4 2 3 3 4 4 Fischer 2 2 0 0 1 2 Night Game PITTSBURGH HOUSTON bi ab bi 4 0 0 0 3 10 0 3 2 11 3 111 4 112 3 0 11 4 0 0 0 3 0 10 3 0 0 0 30 5 Schofield ss 4 0 0 0 Moraan 2b Spanqler If Wvnn cf Bond lb AsDro'te 3b Staub rf Bateman Lillis ss Farrell Totals Virdon cf 4 0 2 0 4 0 10 3 0 10 3 0 10 3 0 10 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 10 10 0 0 30 0 7 0 'Clem'nte rf Starqell If Bailey 3b ci'dfnm lb Paqli'onl Alley 2b law Lynch ph Totals Pittsburgh 000 000 0000 Houston 100 003 10X 5 Paqllaronl, Law, Bailev, 'Virdon. i uk Houston 2.

lob pinsouran 4, i Houston 5. js Bailey. HR Aspromonte (1), Wvnn (2). MICHIGAN PALMS CARMEN KRAMER ROYAL-RIVIERA WOODS I vs ii a 3 ,0,1.1 I II item I i 3oi 300 i ANY CAE! EXCEPT FOREIGN says: Jl 1 I St. Louis 100 000 M0-3 )p E.R BB 50 Cincinnati 000 121 Mx LawU 0-2 7 5 5 4q 3( 1 Gasliaho.

McCarver. DP Cm- Farrell 2-1 9 7 0 0 1 2 cinnatl 1. LOB St. Louis 10, Cincinnati! HBP By Law, Bond. 2:00.

A 7. 130,736. Tartars Top Dinghy Trial Wayne State, Kent State and University of Detroit fin- ished Saturday on the De- points. mam WRESTLING MAY 1st 1ST IOUT P.M. DfTROIT'S FAVORITI LORD LAYTON and FRITZ YON ERIC vs.

Hndsom JOHN BAREKD Magnificent MAURICE THE BODY BEAUTIFUL Sailor THOMAS vs. THE SKIEEC 6-MAN TAG MATCH 4 MIDGETS 2 GIANTS FUZZY CUPID BILLY th KID om4 ALEXANDER tk GREAT VS. POKCJIO 10FQ SONNY I0Y CASSIDY and FRED CURRY Bulldog BROWIR johnny POWER Tk T4 MATCH fvryM Wants The STUDENTu. BOB NANDOR lTh BEAST' RIVERA Masked Marvel vs. Mr.

Kleen LAYTOI I I I car it will look like $1 00.00 makes you feel like a costs only $29.95." HR Pinson (2), Robinson ui. 30 M'SUII Pinson. Harper, Cardenas Harper. SF IP Ir BB SO Stallard 0-1 5 5 3 3 3-2 Carlton 0 1 111 0 Washburn 2 2 2 1 2 1 1 Ellis 3-0 7 3 3 5 3 McCool 1 0 0 0 1 1 Carlton faced 2 men In oth; Ellis faced 2 men In 9th. HBP By Ellis, SDiezlo.

WP Carlton. Balk-Ellis. 3:12. A 3, tub. night.

Aspromonte's two-run homer I 'the Astros' first in their new domed stadium capped a three-run sixth-inning rally after Pirate starter Vern Law had given up only one hit in the first five innings. TV Channel 50 THURSDAY 7 CD HOME SEASON STARTS MAY 4 Every TUESDAY Thru SATURDAY MEN! AND GAL'S TEAMS JAM-PACKED ACTION FREE SOUYENIRS! MAIL RESERVATIONS WRITE MICHIGAN STATE FAIR DETROIT, MICHIGAN 48203 THURS. $1.50 SAT. $1.50. RES.

S2-S3 CHILDREN PRICE BOX OFFICE OPEN AT WOODWARD ENTRANCE Afl Q0Tfl7A 8 As Seen On 8:30 P.M -A I I has occurred, but I could not help but be interested in Kansas because it is my alma mater." There have been three resignations this year from the Oregon State coaching staff. Football coach Tommy Proth-ro was the first to go. He left in January after being at Oregon State 10 years. i Track coach Sam Bell was next. He said he would stay for this season, then would go, to the University of California.

He has held the job seven years. Routine BOURNEMOUTH. England (JFi Ann Haydon Jones of England won the women's singles championship in the British Hard Court tennis tournament Saturday for the third time by defeating Annette Van Zyl, South Africa's No. 1 player, 7-5, 6-1. ill YOUR FAVOIITf ITI I The 61-year-old Easton was fired Tuesday by Kansas ath- 'letic director Wade Stinson Timmons also will serve as director of the Kansas Relays.

TIMMONS, who served one vear as Kansas assistant, left Kansas only Monday to become head track coach at Oregon State. He had a verbal agreement with Slats Gill, Oregon State athletic director, but Stinson asked and received permission from Gill to talk to Timmons. It is likely that Ryun, who earlier announced he would follow Timmons to Oregon State, will now follow him to Kansas. Friday night Ryun broke his own national prep mile record with a 4:02. His career best is in a non-prep mile, before he made the U.S.

Olympic team. AT CORVALLIS, Timmons said, "I am sorry all this 2T RUSTPROOF NOW AT SAVE-YOUR-CAR 4330 E. DAVISON FO ft-9840 7201 DIX RD. VI 1-1122 13S31 GREENFIELD VE 8-4280 2366 DIX RD. DU 2-6161 1S901 MACK TU 2-9960 22252 GRATIOT PR 2-7136 25600 VAN DYKE SL 7-0304 rK i 4 ik Bin WMaMiiuBaMMMWiaiMiiiiaM irrn T'f-irnr "tiiin iniMiin SUPER DIAMOND GLOSS UNCONDITIONAL LIFETIME GUARANTEE Th Eirt Scheib Auto Paint Shops guarantee that your $49.95 "Super Diamond Gloss" paint job will not fade on your car.

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