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Thursday, July 21, 1966
KINGS MOUNTAIN HERALD, KINGS, MOUNTAIN, N. C.
Herald
\
Sports
Juniors Ruled Out In Meetipg At Salisbury
By GARY STEWART
Legion Baseball Program Unorganized
From the chain of events in Area IV Legion baseball
of the past week, I would say that Kings Mountain’s Little
League baseball program is 10 times better organized
than the Legion program. .
Area IV and state officials have kept Kings Mountain,
Hickory, and most of all, Belmont in a daze since last Sat
urday’s disputed game here against KM and Hickory.
Kings Mountain Coach Bob Hussey protested Hick
ory’s use of Newton pitcher Bob Whisnant against the
Mounties. Hussey said thatlt^was in violation of the play
ing rules that Whisnant could play for Hickory after be
ing a member of the Newton team until it dropped out of
the league two weeks after the season began.
Post 155 Athletic Director Carl Wilson was in Ra
leigh last Monday meeting with State Commissioner Bob
Cruz who said that Kings Mountain should advance
against Belmont and that he (Cruz) would send Hickory
officials a telegram Tuesday informing them of his ruling.
Cruz sent Wilson a telegram Tuesday confirming his
ruling and supposedly sent Hickory Coach Troy Washam
a similar telegram. But Hickory showed up at Belmont
Wednesday night, ready to play ball, and with a telegram
from Area IV Commissioner Joe Phillips saying that Kings
Mountain was out and Hickory was in.
It looks like the “little man’’ up at Shelby has more
say. so than the state commissioner because Cruz set up
a meeting for Thursday afternoon in Shelby.
At Thursday’s meeting the officials decided to call
the Hickory - KM series even at 1-all and a playoff game
was set up for Thursday night in Hickory. Both KM and
Hickory officials were told that Thursday’s playoff game
would decide wl^ich team would play Belmont and that
would be the end of the big squabble.
Kings Mountain defeated Hickory 8-5 and went to
Belmont Friday and lost 14-1. A report in Friday’s Shelby
Daily Star indicated that Hickory officials were going to
get a court order to stop the KM-Belmont series but noth
ing was done there.
State Commander Bob Davis then stepped into the
picture and set up a meeting for Saturday afternoon in
Salisbury, with Kings Mountain not being represented
Wonder why?
Phillips said that Davis told him Friday to call both
the Belmont and KM coaches and tell them not to play
at Belmont Friday. Phillips said that he called the homes
of both men, but they were not there, and he told their
^ wives.
Now that can’t be right. He might have told Belmont
Coach Neb Hollis’ wife but he didn’t talk to Coach Hj^-
sey.'s wife.
So, Saturday afternoon at 5:30 Kings Mountain of-]
ficials were notified of the Salisbury meeting. The ruling
was reported to have been 4-1 in Hickory’s favor and the
two Hickory players were ruled eligible.
Commander Davis, when confronted with the ques
tion as to whether or not Belmont and Gastonia can pick
up some new players, said absolutely not.
Now, it all boils down to this. Davis is going to do
what Davis wants to do and that calls for breaking the
rules all to pieces. If Hickory can play Leatherman and
Whisnant without the rules being changed it looks like
Belmont and Gastonia can add players also.
The state commander is not supposed to have any
thing to do with settling a protest, that’s suppose te^ be
left up to the area and state commissioner. And the state
commissioner is supposed to have the final say-so.
You Have To Give Hussey Much Credit
Kings Mountain’s season ended in a dizzy but now
let’s look back over the rest of the year.
You have to give Coach Hussey much credit for turn
ing out a winning team this year. He took mostly the
same boys that posted a 4-10 record for Kings Mountain
high school this spring and turned them into a winning
team.
The Juniors posted a 15-11 mark for the season §rtid
finished in fifth place in the regular season standings.
I would have to point out Nelson Connor and Roy
Medlin as the outstanding players of the year with Mickey
Adkins the spotlight of the pitching crew.
Connor led the team in hitting with a .404 mark and
Medlin’s six home runs set a record for a KM player and
also led Area IV. Adkins worked a total of 63 innings,
posted a 3-1 record, and was one of the top relief pitchers
in the league.
Connor hit safely in all but one game this year and
his smooth fielding gained him respect from every coach
in the league. Medlin’s ability to hit the long ball had
every pitcher in the league pitching him carefully.
Medlin set a total of eight records this year. He broke
the all-time home run record with two grand slammers
against Bessemer City. He went into that game with three
round-trippers and tied for the lead in all-time homers
with Jerry Morris. Medlin blasted a grand-slammer in the
second inning of that game to break the record and came
up later in the fifth and smacked another.
Shelby Game Was^ost Exciting
The most exciting game of the 1966 season, to me,
was the 11-inning contest with Shelby which KM won, 2-
1. It took a ninth-inning homer by Medlin to tie the game
and an 11th inning double by Roy to win it.
Also exciting about that game was the pitcher’s duel
between Steve Goforth and Shelby lefty Tommy Hayes.
Hayes had just led the Crest high school team to the State
Class A championship and was a sure bet to offer stiff
competition to Area IV Legion teams.
Hayes had just knocked Forest City from the unbeat
en ranks the following Tuesday night and had KM batters
stiffle,d until the ninth.
Kings Mountain came to bat in the ninth with only
two hits off Hayes. Medlin led off the inning with a homer
but the southpaw got the next three in order.
Connor and Tony Leighjed off the 11th with back-to-
back singles and Medlin csuhe up with a double to win
the game. a
All But Two Players Back Next Year
Kings Mountain will be in good shape again next
year. Pitcher Steve Goforth and outfielder Ronnie Rhea
are the only two players who terminate their eligibility.
Goforth posted a 5-5 record for the Mounties this
year while Rhea was second in hitting with a .269 aver
age. Both will be missed next time around but Post 155
will have capable players taking their places.
Rhea was a three-year starter for the locals and Go
forth has seen much duty for the past three years. Before
this year, however, Goforth has worked in relief.
COPY OF TELEGRAM FROM NATIONAL BASE
BALL COMMISSIONER GEORGE W. RULON TO
KINGS MTN. POST 155 ATHLETIC DIRECTOR
CARL WILSON
To: Carl Wilson
From: George W. Rulon
Dept. Committee has apparent disregard for
North Carolina's rule concerning players' participa
tion with more than one team regrettable. Despite
disagreement with Saturday's meeting action, must
accept final decision reached under National Rule 7.
Suggest that rule concerning players' participation
with more than one team be adhered to in the future
or deleted from your rulebook. Rule as presently
written follows a true concept of program. Would ap
preciate full discussion of matter at your earliest op
portunity..
Teener All-Stars
Beat Cherryville
Kings Mountain’s Teener
League All-Stars defeat^ Cher
ryville two straight games on
Monday and Tuesday to advance
to the state playoffs which be
gin Monday in Greenville, N. C.
The Teeners will leave Kings
Mountain Sunday.
The locals beat the Cherries
by a 7-2 count here Monday but
squeezed by 3-2 Tuesday in
Cherryville.
Southpaw Rocky Goforth gain
ed the pitching win Monday and
right - hander Darrell Whetstine
picked up the victory 'Tuesday.
Both pitchers went the distance.
In Monday’s game, Kings
Mountain rallied for four runs
in the second inning and added
singletons in the third, fourth
and sixth while Goforth checked
the Cherries on only four hits.
The locals collected only five
hits off Cherryville pitchers Far-
Kinga .Mountain’s American i
Legion Juniors found themselves
ruled out of Area IV competition
Saturday after a meeting at
Salisbury between statc'and area
commissioners.
State Commissioner Bob Cruz
was over ruled by the other of
ficials and the protest ruling
I was reversed and the quarter-
1 finals series between Hickory
1 and Kings Mountain was award-
i ed to Hickory.
The big KM-Hickoiy squabble
began last Saturday night at
City Stadium when Post 1551
Coach Bob Hussey protested j
Hickory’s use of former Newton i
pitcher Bob VVliisnant.
Kings Mountain Athletic Dir-1
ector Carl Wilson went to Ra-1
leigh last Monday to present tlie i
protest. ta State __Cormnissionei |
CruZv^ Wilson received" a 'tele-j
gram ‘from Cruz Tuesday morn
ing informing him that KM was |
to play Belmont Wednesday
night in Bolm'ont.
Post 155 traveled to Belmont
Wednesday night only to be
greeted by Hickory. Wilson im
mediately telephoned Cruz in
Raleigh and Cruz told both Hick
ory and KM not to play and that
he would set up a meeting for
4:30 Thursday afternoon in Shel-
by. .
Hickory’s reason for showing
up at Belmont Wedne.sday was,
of course, to play but the Hick
ory officials bad received a tele
gram frcfm ATt?a IV^ commission
er Joe Phillips of Shelby which
said that Hickory was to ad
vance against Belmont.
At Thursd.ay’s meeting in
Shelby officials clecidi-d to call
the KM-Hickory series even at
one game each and a final play-
up for Thurs
day night in Hickory.
That game was won by Kings
Mountain, 8-5, and the Mounties
went to Belmont Friday night
for a game which Belmont won
14-1. The two teams were to
I ^
Teener League
Boxscores
MONDAY
Kings Mountain
AB
R
H
BI
Cornwell, cf
1
1
0
0
Carroll, rf
0
0
0
0
Putnam, ss
4
0
1
2
Smith, 2b
4
0
0
0
Perkins, If
«2'
1
0
«
Bla!tk,'lf >
1
0
0
-0
Mullinax, 3b
2
1
0
1
Howard, rf, cf
3
1
1
0
Ashe, c
3
1
2
1
Mitchem, lb
2
1
0
1
Goforth, p
3
1
1
2
25
7
5
7
Cherryville
Bennett, cf
3
0
0
0
Randall, If
2
0
0
0
Fisher, 3b
3
0
0
0
Burgess, c
4
0
3
0
Patterson, p, 2b
4
1
0
0
Stroupe, rf
1
1
0
0
Crowder, 2b
1
0
0
0
Hefner, p
1
0
0
0
Beam, lb
2
0
0
0
Walls, 2b
3
0
1
2
24
2
4
2
WP — Goforth. LP — Patterson.
TUESDAY
Kings Mountain AB R H BI
Cornwell, cf 4 110
Putnam, ss 4 0 10
Smith, 2b 3 12 1
Perkins, If 2 110
Carroll, If 10 0 0
Mullinax, 3b 3 0 0 0
Howard, rf 2 0 0 0
Ashe, c 2 0 0 0
Mitchem, lb 3 0 10
Whetstine, p 2 0 0 0
26 3 6 1
Cherryville
Bennett, cf 3 0 0 0
Randall, rf 2 110
Fisher, 3b 3 0 10
Burgess, c 3 0 10
Patterson, ss 3 0 3 0
Stroupe, If 3 0 0 0
Walls, 2b 2 10 0
Beam, 2b 2 0 0 0
Lindsay, p 2 0 11
WP — Whetstine. LP—Lindsay.
Etheridge Wins
Tennis Tourney
Richard Etheridge defeated
Tony Ware Thursday for the
championship in the City Singles
Tennis Tournament. In semi-Jfin-
als play Wednesday Etheridge
beat Mike Ware and Tony Ware
beat Robby Suber.
The annual douible-elemination
Doubles Tourney is now under
way, with first round play be
ginning Tuesday.
In action Tuesday Mike and
Tony Ware defeated Don Free
man and Richard Etheridge 6-4,
4.6 and 6-4 and Robby Suber and
Sandy Mauney beat Beattie
Leonard and Robby Whisnant 6-
2 and 6-0.
Second round actiop Wednes
day had the Ware brothers play
ing against the teaim of Suber
and Mauney and today’s action
pits Freeman and Etheridge a-
gainst Leonard and Whisnant.
The winners play Friday with
the losers of today’s matches be
ing eliminated.
Suber and Mauney are the de
fending doubles champions.
Fell Patterson and Scott Hefner
but took advantage of three
Cherrie errors, four bases on
balls and two hit batters.
Goforth, with the exception of
the fourth inning when the visi
tors scored their two runs, was
never in serious trouble. He
struck out six batters and walk
ed seven en route to the win.
Catcher Clarence Ashe led the
locals at bat with two hits in .
three trips to the plate. Gene
Putnam, Geeper Howard and Go
forth collected KM's other hits.
Kings Mountain’s defense did
not commit an error.
Clean-up batter Glenn Perkins
led off the KM second with a, , .c, . j k,.. ot
walk and went to second an out
later when Howard singled to^^^ aatur ay
rightfield. Ashe reached base on j Hussey
a fielder’s choice and Perkins;
scored the first run when Ken j
Mitchem walked. ]
Goforth then reached ba.se on
an error to score Howard and
Ashe and, after Joe Cornwell
filed out, Putnam singled to
send in Mitchem. Mike Smith
Hied out to end the inningr
Kings Mountain added its fifth
run in the third inning with
Ashe driving home Wayne Mul
linax after Mullinax wa.lked and
stole second. n,
(Cherryville brought the gam6
closer at 5-2 in the fourth by
scoring two runs on two hits.
Catcher Mike Burgess, who got
three of Cherryville’s four hits,
led things off with a single but
was forced at second when Pat
terson hit a grounder to short.
Goforth then issued walks to
Tommy Stroupe and Norris Beam
to load the bases and shortstop
Ronnie Walls singled in the run
ners from second and third.
Goforth singled to lead-off the
KM fourth, went to second when
Cornwell was hit by a pitched
ball, took third when Putnam
reached base on an error and
scored two outs later when Mul
linax drew a base on balls.
In the sixth, Cornwell was hit
by a pitched ball, stole second
and scored when Putnam reach
ed base on an error.
Tuesday at Cherryville Kings
Mountain scored one run in the
first inning and two in the
fourth while Cherryville scored
'V <■-
LEFT — NELSON CONNOR
RIGHT — MICKEY ADKINS
TOP — ROY MEDLIN
Connor’s ,404 Batting Mark
Leads Juniors For 66 Season
afternnon, Coach
received word that KM
was out and Hickory was in.
Hickory and Belmont played
Saturday night in Belmont with
Hickory losing by a 2-1 count.
Saturday’s meeting in Salis
bury was set up by .8tate Com
mander Boh Davis, Five officials
voted on the matti*r .and the out
come was 4-1 in Hickory’s fa
vor. The only Vote for KM was
supposedly put . in by Cruz.
Medlin’s Homei
Lifts Juniois
Past Hickory
Kings Mountain’s Juniors rode
the pitching arm of Mickey Ad
kins and the hitting of Roy Med
lin, Ronnie Rhea* and Tony Leigh
past Hickory into the semi-finals
of the Area IV play-offs Thurs
day night.
Past 1.55 had to travel to Hic
kory Thursday to decide v.dtich
team would advance again.st
Belmont and when the final out
was made. Kings Mountain had
an 8-5 victory.
Adkins went the distance for
the locals, picking up his third
I win of the season against only;
one los.s. He .scattered eighl hits.
I walked only two batters and
j struck out 12. I
I Medlin led the 12-hit Moiin-
, taineer attack with a home run,
and two singles in five times at,
Shortsloi) Nelson Connor led ]'
the Kings Mountain Juniors in i
hitting tills .season with a .41)4 i
batting average.
Connor, wlio made all-conf(‘r-
enco for KMHS this past .season
while leading that team in hit
ting, collected a total of .38 tiits
in 94 times at bat. Nelson also
led tiic team in doubles wit it
five, wa.s second in runs scorc'ci
with 20, had 12 runs batted in
and tied for the lead in triples
witli one. - ^
Connor was the only regular to
hit over .300.
Second on tlic liilting list wa.s
Ronnie Rhea who played the out
field, first base,.third base and!
was a relief pitcher. Rltea wasi
25-for-93, good fob a .269 avef-j
age. I
Catcher Paul Gaffney was the
only other regular to hit over;
the .250 mark. Gaffney collected |
22 hits in 84 times at bat for a[
.262 average.
Legion Individual Statistics
Ronnie Burton, of
Nel.son Connor, ss
Ronnie Rhea, inf.-of
l^aul Gaffney, c
Roy Medlin, c-3b-of
Phillip Cash, 2b
Bruce Jones, of
Tommy Goforth, p-lb-of
Tony Leigh, of
Chuck Ray, inf.
Chucky Gladden, lb-3b
Steve Goforth, p-of
Mickey Adkins, p-inf.-of'
Bill Bridges, of
Stanley Laughter, lb
David Norris, p ,
1
0
1
94
20
38
93
17
25
84
12
22
98
17
22
96
12
21
P
2
1
70
10
13
98
21
17
13
1
2
86
7
13
23 '
3
3
39
4
5
35
0
4
2
0
0
4
0
0
841
126
187
1.000
.404
.269
.262
.224
.219
.200
.186
.172
.154
.151
.130
.128
.114
.000
.000
PITCHING RECORDS
Roy Medlin led the team in'
slugging with 11 extra base hits.]
Medlin clouted six home run.s,j
one triple and four doubles, led!
the team in runs batled in with!
30 and was third in runs scored
with 17. Medlin collected a total
of 22 hits in 98 times at bat for
a .224 average.
Post 1.55 had three pitchers to
post a winning record with Mic
key Adkin.s’ 3-1 tab tops for the
club. Adkins had the be.st earned
run average, 2.43 and gave up-
least number of hits for a!
star'er, 53. '
Mickey -Adkins
3
1
62%
24
63
Steve Goforth
5
5
72
62
88
Tommy Goforth
3
3
59%
27
48
David Norris
1
2
12%
9
14
Ronnie Rhea
0
0
6%
6
3
12
11
204
128
216
.222
2.43
2.50
4.20
5.25
6.00
3.21
HOME RUNS — Medlin 6. TRIPLES — Connor, Med
lin, Rhea, Leigh, one each. DOUBLES — Connor 5,
Medlin 4, Gaffney 3, Rhea 3, Cash 2, Leigh 2, Adkins
2, Bridges 1, T. Goforth 1. RBI — Medlin 30, Cash 14,
ney 1, Cash 1, Medlin 1, T.
Goforth 1.
Goforth 1, Gladden 1, S.
singletons in the first and fifth, i bat. Leigh had a triple and sin-
_ „ , . , ,. ! gle in Hve times at bat and
Cornwell scored for KM in the Sv, „ ..
... . 11 XI. r Rhea added a double and sinf,Me
nrs , coming all- the way from, ]
first base on a double by Smith. ghort.stop Nel.son Connor and
Cherryville came nght back in I baseman Phil Cash also,
the bottorn of the first to collect
four hits but poor base running rightfielder Tom-
held the hosts to only one run.
r vTi/i * .u i niy Goforth got the team s other
In the KM fourth, two errors, i,,;
. ,, ... ’ , 'i hit. a single,
two walks, a wild pitch and a
single by Perkins produced two
runs. Cherryville scored its final
run on a walk, an error, a stolen
base and a single by losing
pitcher Allan Lindsay.
Steve Goforth posted a 5-5 rec
ord while leading the team in
.'ilrikeouts with 88. Tommy Go
forth was 3-3 on the season and
ixisted a' 4.20 "'earned run aver
age.
Post 1.55 posted an overall rec
ord of 15 wins and 11 losses,
liowevor, three of those wins
were by forfeit.
reached base when' hit by a
pitched ball, and took second on Hall,
a single by Goforth.
Hickory tallied its final two
runs in the eighth, also. Catcher
Mike Malian doubled to lead
Most Valuable Player To Be Named
At Legion Banquet Next Thursday
The annual American Legion
Baseball steak dinner will be
lield for Po.si 155 players, their
paianil.s and other guests Thurs
day night, July 28 at the Legion
Cherryville offered
threat in the seventh
shortstop Farrell Patterson led
things off with a double. But
Whetstine tightened down and
struck out two batters and got
another to fly out to end the
game.
- Kings Mountain collected six
hits off -Lindsay with Smith’s
2-for-3 performance showing the
way. Lindsay gave up only one
earned run, walked four and
struck out seven.
Whetstine gave up seven hits,
one earned run, walked two -and
fanned four.
Patterson’s 3 • for - 3 pwform-
ance topped the home team’s
hitting.
Legion To Sponsor
Trip To Atlanta
American Le^on Post 155 will
sponsor its third bus trip to At
lanta, Ga., Sunday, July 31, for
a baseball gai.-ne between the At
lanta Braves and the San Fran
cisco Giants.
Fee is $12.50, and that includes
round-trip bus fare plus a re
served seat for the game.
There will be two buses char
tered for the- trip. Y.ou do > not
have to be a Legion mcmlber to
attend. -ir
Kings Mountain tallied six of
its runs in the sixth and seventh
Innings, getting three in each
frame. Leigh, Rhea and Cash ^ ,,,
had singles to produce the runsi'hings off, Richard Dellinger
in the sixth with a single by walked and both runners scored
a tough 1 Connor, a triple by Leigh and' o” ^ two-out double by Ted
inning as' Medlin’s towering homer turning Spencer,
the trick in the seventh.
Post 155 struck for a 1-0 lead
Optimist Wins Out
In Little League
Optimist defeated Lions 5-3
Hiu:ii]igliting the program will night to put a perfect
be tlu“ pii'scMitation of the Most' 1966 Little League
Valuahl(> Player Award which |
The
will go to the boy who, in the
minds ol a special committee,
contribuied the most to the suc
cess of the team this year.
Last year
Shortstop
the award went to
win over Lions gave
Coach Max Bolin’s boys a per
fect 14-0 record for regular sea
son play.
Dana Sarvis was the winning
pitclier. Mark McDaniel led the
in hitting with a
in the
driving
double
lull for Hickory and was tagged, ^ t^e semi-
first inning with Rhea loss. Malian led the
Connor home with a Hi(.kory hitting with two doubles
to deep centerfield. But, jjyg times at bat.
Hickory came back in the bot-j ,
tom of the first for two runs on BOXSCORE
a single by Larry Sisk, a ba.se Kings Mountodn
on balls, a hit batter, a .stolen ] Connor, ss
base and a KM error gliding the , Leigh, If
cause. i Medlin, 3b
Hickory made it 34 in the; Rhea, cf
third with second baseman CIc- j Cash, 2b
ment Huffman scoring on an or-! Gaffney, c
,, ,, i I A *i I-•'Muii.-Mui* Richard Gold whose! team in hitting with a single
Ron Hastings started on tlie! batting average led Post 155i double in three times at bat.
Rescue Squad defeated Police
2-0 ^Thursday night to finish
second in the eight-team stand
ings. police and Lions tied for
third place with identical .7-6
records.
AB
finals of the Area IV playoffs.
No guest speaker has been
named as of yet, however, .Coach
Bob Hussc'y and Athletic Officer
HiCi^-1 Wilson will deliver short
2j talks. Hu-ssey will present the
2 MVP Award.
FINAL STANDINGS
ror after reaching base on an
error.
Leigh led off the KM
with a single, stole second and
made it 3-2 an out later when
Rhea singled. Cash then sent
Rhea home with a single and
scored hiimself later on a balk,
making the score 4-3.
Post 155 tallied three more
runs in the seventh to make it
7-3 and pretty well Insure the Hoover, ph
win. Connor led off with a sin-; Dellinger, lb
gle, Leigh sent him home with
a triple and Medlin then con
nected for his sixth home run of
the season, a towering drive
which cleared a building over
the centerfield fence.
Gladden, lb
T. Goforth, rf
sixtfi" Adkins, p
Hickory
Huffman, 2b,
Fisher, 3b
Sisk, .ss
Malian, c
Berry, rf
Team
Optimist
Rescue Squad
Lions
Police
Kiwanis
2 The MVP .Award presentation
2 was originated in 1959 when
0 pitcher Bobby Biddix was the
0 recipient. Since that year, two
1 pitchers, two infielders and one
01 outfielder have been awarded
_ the trophy. rarkgrace
38 8 12 All - Time Post 155
Most Valuable
Players
The Mountaineers scored their
final run in the eighth with
Chucky Gladden coming home
on a single by Connor. Gladden
Lail, If
Spencer, cf ’ 4 0 1
Ha.stings, p 2 0 0^
Shofner, 2b 2 0 o!
E —Gaffney, Adkin.s, Rhea. DP—:
Hickory 1. LOB — KM 5, H 8.|
2B — Malian 2, Spencer, Rhea.i
3B — Leigh. HR — Medlin. HBPj
—Gladden, Huffman. WP . —
Hastings. BALK — Hastings. <
1959— Bobby Biddix, pitcher.
1960— Not Given.
1961— Ernest McCarter, pitcher.
1962— Jim Leigh, flret-bosepiaa.
1963— Mickey BeU, outfielder.
1964— Warren Goforth, pitcher.
1965— Richard Gold, shortstop.*
AT MARKET
Dick McGinnis represented
McGinnis Furniture Company
at the Southern Furniture
Market in High Point July 11- i
15. I
Jaycees
Europeans eat twice
potatoes as Americans,
the amount is decreasing.
Pet.
0 1.000
5 .615
6 .538
6 .538
8 .428
7 .416
8 .384
13 .072
as many
However,
TrofToTrotl
For Insursoce*
Insurance For Every Veef
Phone 739-24