MORNING TRIBUNE, Saturday, September 24, 1955 'Latest Coinword Puzzle COINWORD No. 12 RA 3 5 6 SK LOSE FILES 9 A PI 10 NES 13 "P) 18 IS 19 20 21 22 23 RE 24 DA 26 LES de 27. 28 PRINT Name Street Address City Telephone Clip and paste to 2-cent postcard and mail to COINWORD EDITOR, The Tampa Morning Tribune, P. O. Box 3391, Tampa 1, Florida.
Answers must be received The Tribune by 9 o'clock Wednesday morning. A box is located in the lobby of The Tribune Bldg. for those who may wish to deliver the answers, Clues For Coinword ACROSS 1-It is a good idea to check on the when buying coal. 4-A manner that is too may be bad for business. 7-Farm structure for grain.
8-A teacher who a student may happen to dislike his performance. 9-People who the ideas of others should be held responsible. 10-Girl's name. 11-When a businessman is too he may inspire distrust in some people. 13-Bird's crop.
18-In a restaurant a waiter is ready to serve your 19-One who gives commands. 23-Snow runner. 24-State of which Boise is the capital: Abbr. 25-When artfully contrived they can be quite interesting. 26-Bird sound.
27-These are readily able by a common color. 28-This can be considered for quite a cut. DOWN 1-Even if you can't take the you should still put up a good show of grace. 2-- Excuse. 3-Literary work.
4-It is rather difficult to interpret an expression like this. 5-Cantered. 6-When a is involved in a deal, you can't be too careful. 12- The the, land, can affect the course ship. 13-This should be sent off with the utmost dispatch.
14-Inquire. 15-In general, people don't pay too much attention to a 16. Quite likely to be a handy guide in a railway station. 17-An army that is well has a good chance to win. 20-Real can't be expected to give much response.
identifi-21-Businessmen try to keep pay at a minimum. 22-Even strong men find certain rather tortuous. Rules For Coinword Contest 1. Solve the puzzle as you would any other crossword puzzle. 2.
The COINWORD contest is open only to residents of Florida or visitors in the state. Employes of The Tribune, the WFLA radio and television stations, and The Exchange National Bank, and the members of their families are not eligible to compete. 3. A contestant may submit as many as five entries on the official entry blank printed in this paper, but no more than one exact-sized hand-drawn facsimile of the puzzle and in no case more than a total of five entries. No mechanically produced (printed, mimeographed, etc.) copies of the message will be accepted unless issued by this paper.
4. To submit an entry by mail, the contestant MUST attach the completed puzzle to a 2-cent postcard and mail it from a Florida postoffice in time to reach the COINWORD EDITOR before 9 o'clock Wednesday morning, or he may deposit it in a box located in the lobby of The Tribune Buildirg. Entries received in envelopes WILL NOT be considered. No entries received after 9 o'clock Wednesday morning, whether mailed or delivered by hand, will be eligible. The Tribune is not responsible for entries lost or delayed in the mail.
If mailed, entries should be addressed to the COINWORD EDITOR, The Tribune, P. O. Box 3391, Tampa 1, Fla. 5. The Tribune will award a prize of $100 to the winner of each weekly COINWORD puzzle.
If more than one winning answer is received, the prize will be divided equally among the winners. If no correct solution is received, the $100 will be added to next week's prize. 6. There is only one correct solution to the COINWORD puzzle, and only that correct answer can win. The decision of the judges is final and all contestants agree to abide by the judges' deeision.
In fairness to all The Tribune cannot discuss this contest by mail, phone, or in any other way with contestants. Please do not phone The Tribune about this contest. 7. All entries become the property of The Tribune. No entries can be returned.
The correct answer will be published in The Tribune each Sunday. 8. Puzzles will be published on Saturdays, Sundays and Mondays. Winners will be announced on Sunday. 9.
The correct answer to the puzzle will be sent by the Syndicate each week direct to The Exchange National Bank and delivered to The Tribune after the closing time of each contest. U. Of T. Aid To Cuba Praised University of Tampa's new craft Technical School in San Julian, Cuba, was extolled by the Cuban minister of education here last night as "proof of evident and generous spirit confraternity." Dr. Aurelio F.
Concheso, former ambassador to the U. pointed out that the wartime base at San Julian had been converted to prepare "legions of technical workers needed for the conservation of peace." He spoke at a special banquet at the Tampa Yacht and Country Club held in honor of the University of Tampa's participation in the project under the Point Four Program of mutual assistance. "Our history of struggle and sacrifice for liberty and independence is tied firmly to the memory of the generous cooperation offered by the people of Tampa to the Cuban cause, and KNULL for FLOWERS 310 W. Lafayette Phone 8-1855 The Florist HEWLETTS 2411 MacDill Ave. Phs.
62-2411- Nights and Sundays 64-6691 Sales Rentals Folding EJ CHAIRS WHEEL FLORIDA BRACE CO. 401-03 Grand Central Ph. 8-1952 Rear of Park Theatre 2 White Men Acquitted In Negro Death (Continued from Page 1) minutes later, they return with a verdict written down in properly legal fashion. It ran: "We the find the defendants not and seemed impassive. Mrs.
broke into Bryant, a subdued smile and she and her husband clasped hands. Later, both couples embraced. Shaw said the jury's decision was based on the state's failure to prove beyond reasonable doubt that it was young Till's body that was taken nude and I mutilated from the Tallahatchie River last Aug. 31. Identification Stressed The defense heavily stressed the issue of identification.
In summing up today, Defense Lawyer John Whitten offered a theory that "rabblerousers" put a Negro body-dead some days- in the river, and falsely balleyhooed it as Till's. The defense said the body's condition indicated it had been deal some time beyond the three days Till had been missing. Special Prosecutor Robert Smith, III, said the crime, if unpunished would endanger the South's "way of life." He conceded "we have outsiders coming in and disrupting our way of life" but Smith insisted the body had been identified by the boy's mother and further identified by the ring it bore- a ring young Till inherited from his dead father. The boy's mother, Mamie Bradley, was not in court for the verdict. The young sons of Bryant and Milam also were absent for the climax.
The Bryant boys, 2 and 3, and the Milam boys, 2 and 4, perched on their fathers' knees and frolicked the courtroom the first two days of the trial. Judge Swango, at the request of the state, dismissed Tallahatchie County kidnaping indictments against Bryant and Milam. He said Tallahatchie County had jurisdiction in Till's murder but not in his abduction. The body was found in Tallahatchie County. Coney, scene of the kidnaping, is in adjoining LeFlore County.
Turned Over to Sheriff The pair were turned over to LeFlore County Sheriff George Smith. They have been formally charged there with kidnaping but the case has not gone to the grand jury. Bryant and Milam are expected to gain freedom on bond while LeFlore County decides whether to try them on kidnaping, a less serious charge here than murder. Shortly after Till's abduction, Roy Wilkins, executive secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, called the slaying a "new style The of lynching." state never specifically asked for a verdict which would have sent Bryant and Milam to Mississippi's gas chamber. Instead, the state merely cited the penal verdicts possible guilty with death or guilty with life imprisonment.
NAACP Says Verdict In Mississippi Case Was 'Shameful' NEW YORK, Sept. 23-(INS) The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People tonight issued a strong statement terming the verdict of the jury in the Emmett Till "wolf murder trial "shameful." NAACP Board Chairman Dr. Channing H. Tobias said the "verdict is as shameful as it is surprising." He' Swango's praised "fair Judge impartial Curtis conduct of the trial" and the "skill and vigor" of Prosecutor Gerald Chatham. Dr.
Tobias maintained the jurors "have done their best to discredit our judicial system and to undermine faith in American democracy." Injunction Against Phosphate Union Tightened By Court BARTOW, Sept. 23-(Special) -Circuit Judge William P. Allen today discharged a striking phosphate union from a rule to show cause why it should not be held 1 in contempt of court, but severely tightened a temporary injunction. against the union, spelling out exactly how picketing may be conducted. The two orders were the climax of a bitterly contested hearing in which International Minerals and Chemical Corp.
contended that Local 35, International Chemical Workers Union (AFL), should be punished as responsible for a "continuing pattern" of violence and intimidation against company property and personnel, and in which the union flatly denied any responsibility for the incidents. The stricter injunction order limits the union to not more than two pickets at any one picket station, limits the picket stations to four, and sternly forbids interference with or intimidation of anyone entering or leaving company property. Talks With Mediators To Resume Today Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service Commissioners were scheduled to meet here again today with spokesmen for labor and management in an effort to settle issues in the International Minerals and Chemical Corp. strike in Polk County. The talks have been going on two days, with conferences lasting well into the night.
Deaths Elsewhere By Associated DAVID HUGH McCULLOCH NEW YORK- Hugh McCulloch, 65, pioneer aviator who received the Navy Cross for his work in the first successful flight across the Atlantic Ocean (in 1919. Died Tuesday. Man Tells Of 800-Mile Trip At Gunpoint BRUCEROBERTS A Tampa plumber told sheriff's deputies last night he was forced to drive to Key West and back an 800-mile roundtrip at gun point by two men and a woman who climbed into his station wagon "to get out of the rain" last Tuesday afternoon while he was parked on East Broadway in Ybor City. LeRoy 44, of 8000 West Hillsborough, who walked into the sheriff's office last night about 7 o'clock, said one of the men and the woman got out in Key West, but that the other man forced him to drive back to Tampa. During the trip most of the driving was back roads and at night, according to Thomas, who said the trio took his wallet which contained $207.
Followed by Another Car Thomas said he was followed all the way back from Key West by a 1953 Oldsmobile which picked up the remaining gunman when he got out just before reaching Gandy Bridge after ordering Thomas to "drive off and not look back." Lydof Thomas and R. told C. Deputies Frazier the George rowing experience started while he was parked outside a plumbing store on East Broadway. "I was waiting for the rain to let up," said Thomas. "First thing I knew a man opened the door and said he wanted to get in out of the rain.
"Then a second later a man and woman climbed in the back seat both carrying suitcases. The men had guns. "They told me to start driving and they'd tell me where to go," said Thomas. Knew Back Roads "They knew the back roads and where they were going," said Thomas. Thomas said he was forced to stop several miles from Key West, where the man in the back and the woman got out and left.
At dusk- after parking an dirt road all day- Thomas said the "little fellow. with the police special" to head back for Tampa. Man Charged With Beating Woman Who 'Jumped' From Truck Frank Register, 40, of 3924 10th was charged with aggravated assault yesterday by sheriff's deputies, who said Mrs. Ernestine Burns, 28-year-old Terra Ceia Island woman, was beaten by Register before she jumped from his pick-up truck Thursday night. Register brought the woman to St.
Joseph's Hospital Thursday night and told deputies she was injured when she jumped from his truck. The woman has been in critical condition since she was brought to the hospital with head injuries. W. B. Lindsay, Tampa Resident 28 Years, Dies William Buford Lindsay fession here for a number of years.
In recent years, he served as an insurance examiner for the state of Florida, under State Insurance Commissioner Larson. He was filling an assignment in that work in New York City when he died. Mr. Lindsay is survived by his widow, Mrs. Ethel Lindsay; a daughter, Mrs.
Ruth Lindsay Deckard, who lives in Tampa, and a son, Buford, who is now in the U. S. Navy. Buford Lindsay was employed by The Tribune in the advertising department before entering the naval service. The funeral services will be his native city, Owenton, resident of Tampa for 28 years, died suddenly yesterday in New York City, of heart attack.
Mr. Lindsay was born in Owenton, June 27, 1886. After graduating from Centre College, Centre, a he practiced a in Winchester, Ky. Coming Tampa in 1927, he followed his pro- Lindsay Knights Templar Honor Six Here The highest order of York Free-Masonry was conferred upon six Masons of Fellowship Lodge No. 265, by Tampa Ivanhoe Commandery No.
8, Knights Templar. Walter Harris, George E. Griffith, Harry G. Trott, Tony A. Mendoza, C.
W. Schofield and Robert L. Borbaugh were conferred knights of the valiant and magnanimous order of the temple. Four Widows Settle Tug Death Claims AFTER BOLITA ARRESTS -Jerry Lopez, left, and Jesus Castillo step into the county jail last night to be booked on charges of aiding and conducting a lottery after sheriff's deputies arrested them in Plant Photo by Bill Wilson). Jerry Lopez and Two Others Nabbed On Sheriff's deputies arrested Jerry Lopez, Tampa lottery figure, last night in Plant City after they said he drove up in the front yard of a Negro home while they were inside making a bolita arrest.
The deputies said they had just found $164 and dozens of bolita tickets in the home of John Sykes, 34-year-old Negro, when Lopez pulled into the yard in his new car and blew the horn. Deputies Kenneth Henning, Zeno Henderson and Charles Whitt had entered Sykes', home only minutes before with a search warrant after receiving a tip the Negro was selling bolita. No Tickets on Him Lopez had no bolita tickets on him when the deputies searched him in the yard, but Sheriff Blackburn said' a copy of the jury venire for the criminal court session of next week was found in his pocket. He faces trial in criminal court next week on a previous bolita charge made last July by Capt. Walter Heinrich of the city vice squad, Blackburn reported.
Lopez, who lives at 3901 State told The Tribune he didn't know Sykes and was looking for a Negro in Plant City who owed him $22. He said he just happened to drive up in the yard to for street directions. The deputies didn't agree with Lopez and said they figured he'd come to pick up the bolita tickets and money. Companion Arrested A companion in the car with Jesus Castillo, of 2517 Spruce St. was also arrested and the deputies then herded Lopez, Castillo and Sykes into Norman V.
Riddle, Former Printing Firm Owner, Dies Norman V. Riddle, 85, of 303 South Brevard, died yesterday in a local hospital. A native of Ashland County, Ohio, and a resident of Tampa for the last 21 he was the owner of a printing company before retiring. He was 'a member of Pythian Bay Lodge No. 12 and of the First Methodist Church.
Mr. Riddle had also been an express agent in Ashland for the Erie and the Pennsylvania Railroads and was associated with the Columbian Trio Concert singers of sacred music, in Ashland, before coming to Tampa. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Erma H. Riddle; a stepson, Headlee Lee Howard, of Greenville, S.
and three grandchildren. His first wife, Mrs. Anna Amelia Smith, died in 1928. Deaths CHARLES B. KIDDER Charles Bernard Kidder, of rural Tampa, died Thursday night in a local hospital.
He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Maybelle Kidder, Tampa, and a stepson, Gilman Brown, Tampa; two daughters, Mrs. Mason Knabe, Clayville, and Mrs. Walt Lochman, Kansas City; his mother, Mrs. Ruby Kidder, 1 Louisville, a sister, Mrs.
Clyde Wilson, Louisville; nine grandchildren and three great grandchildren. A native of Garland, Mr. Kidder was a builder and designer for Royal American Shows. He had resided in Tampa three months. RUPERT H.
ALDRED Rupert Harry Aldred, 78, of Palm River, died at his residence Thursday, A native of New York, Mr. Aldred had been a resident of Palm River for 26 years. He was a member of the Knights of Pythias for 52 years, and of the Western Reserve F. A. M.
Lodge in Cleveland, Ohio, and of the Palm River Baptist Church. Survivors are his widow; Mrs. Lina Aldred, Palm River; two daughters, Mrs. Florence George and Mrs. Grace Schmid, both of Cleveland, Ohio; a son, Howard Euclid, Ohio; a step-son, Wendell Townsend, Atlanta, two step-daughters, Mrs.
Dorothy Grantham, DeLand, and Miss Frances Townsend, Tampa; 10 grandchildren and 12 greatgrandchildren, By Settlement of four suits seeking damages of $450,000 brought by widows of tug crewmen lost at sea after storm tragedy, was reported in circuit court yesterday. Circuit Judge Harry N. Sandler signed orders of dismissal in each of the suits, noting that the cases had been settled out of court for undisclosed amounts. Plaintiffs in the suits were wives of members of the crew aboard the tug Bertha R. Named as defendant in the actions was Blue Stack Towing operators of the tug.
According to the suits, the men died after being forced to abandon the vessel in heavy seas on Dec. 5, 1954. The plaintiffs charged negligence and failure to provide proper safety devices as contributing to the deaths. The plaintiffs are: Evelyn Little Buie, administratrix of the estate of First Mate William E. Buie; Frances L.
Morris, administratrix of the estate of Vesper L. Morris, chief engineer; Margaret C. Royals, administratrix of the estate of William T. Royals, second engineer, and Madeline T. Harris, administratrix of the estate of Harold M.
Harris, wiper. THE TAMPA TRIBUNE Published every morning be The Tribune Company from The Tribune Building, Lafayette and Morgan Streets, Tampa, Florida. Entered second class matter at the Postoffice at Tampa, Florida, under the Act of March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Daily Daily Sunday Sunday Only Only Year $23.40 $15.60 $7.80 11.70 7.80 3.90 Months 5.85 3.90 1.95 Month 1.95 1.30 .65 Week .45 .30 .15 Subscriptions payable in advance. Member of Associated Press Member Audit Bureau of Circulations.
Lottery Charges their patrol car and headed back to Tampa. Castillo and Lopez were charged with aiding and conducting a lottery and Sykes, was charged with conducting lottery. Blackburn said Lopez was charged with conducting a lottery on Sept. 1, 1950, and again on Sept. 12, 1953.
In addition to the charges made by Heinrich last July, Lopez was also arrested in April of last year and charged with vagrancy for being a known gambler, the sheriff reported. Funeral Notices ALDRED, RUPERT HARRY Funeral services for Mr. Rupert Harry Aldred, 78, resident of Palm River, who passed away Thursday morning at his residence, will be held this afternoon at 2 o'clock from Wilson Sammon Company Funeral Home, The Rev. Milan J. Gowing, pastor of Palm River Baptist Church, officiating.
Cremation will follow. BLACK. AUDIE services for Mr. Audie C. Black, 71, of 6602 Harer, will be conducted this afternoon at o'clock from the chapel of the Duval Funeral Home, with Dr.
Roy pastor of the Buffalo Avenue Baptist Church, officiating. Interment will be in Myrtle Hill Cemetery. Pallbearers will be T. C. Thomas, J.
G. Carr, W. H. Blevins, E. C.
Hudson, A. P. Hughey and R. A. Brantly.
COLLINS, JAMES MORRISONservices for James Morrison Collins, 69, resident of 410 East North who passed away Wednesday night at his residence, will be held this morning at 11:30 o'clock from Wilson Sammon Company Funeral Home, The Rev. J. Elwood Rawls, pastor of Ballast Point Baptist Church, officiating, Interment in Myrtle Hill Cemetery. Pallbearers will be Don Wood, Melivan Ford, Mr. Pruett, Mr.
Stewart, Mr. Grief and Jesse Hill. COPP. MRS. BERTHA WEBB-Funeral services for Mrs.
Bertha Webb Copp, 73, resident of 300 West Sligh, who passed away in a local hospital Tuesday night, will be held Saturday morning at 10 o'clock from Wilson Sammon Company Funeral Home, The Rev. Ruby I. Wagner, of Unity Temple, officiating. Interment in Orange Hill Cemetery. EASTON, MRS.
MARY ELIDA- -Funeral services for Mrs. Mary Elida Easton, 79, of 203 South will be held this afternoon at 4 o'clock at the chapel of the F. T. Blount Company New Funeral Home, 5101 Nebraska with The Rev. E.
C. Abernathy, pastor of the Riverside Baptist Church, and The Rev. George Weatherbee, pastor of the First Evangelical United Brethren Church, officiating. Interment will be in Woodlawn Cemetery. Pallbearers will be Mr.
C. L. Patch, Mr. W. E.
Bridges, Mr. Walter Percy, Mr. A. W. Harris, Mr.
R. W. Knight and Mr. Lloyd Abbott. Survivors include five daughters, Mrs.
R. W. Fuller of Abbeville, S. Mrs. W.
F. Smallwood of Kansas City, Mrs. G. H. Tyrce of Tampa, Mrs.
Max A. Lauffer of Pittsburgh, Mrs. F. L. Stephens of Tampa; two sons, W.
H. Easton of Stillwater, and Albert Easton of Tampa: two sisters, Mrs. R. W. Trapwell of Plant City, and Mrs.
C. B. Gaylord of Tampa, nine grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. FRANKLIN, RICHARD Richard -Funeral servfor Mr. W.
Franklin, 73, of 14001 Nebraska will be conducted this morning at 10 o'clock at the graveside, with The Rev. J. Ralph Keene, pastor of the Idlewild Baptist Church, officiating. Arrangements are in charge of the Duval Funeral Home. KIDDER, CHARLES BERNARD Funeral services for Mr.
Charles Bernard Kidder, 69, of rural Tampa will be held this afternoon at 2 o'clock at the chapel of the F. T. Blount Co. New Funeral Home, 5101 Nebraska Ave. Interment will be in Myrtle Hill Cemetery.
Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Maybelle Kidder of Tampa; one stepson, Gilman Brown of Tampa; two daughters, Mrs. Mason Knabe of Clayville, and Mrs. Walt Lockman of Kansas City, his mother, Mrs. Ruby Kidder of Louisville, one sister, Mrs.
Clyde Wilson of Louisville, nine grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. RIDDLE, NORMAN -Funeral services for Mr. Norman V. Riddle, 85, of 303 South Brevard, will be held this ing at 11 o'clock at the chapel of the F. T.
Blount Company New Funeral Home, 5101 Nebraska with Dr. M. C. Cleveland of the First Methodist Church officiating. Knights of Pythias Bay Lodge No.
12 will be in charge at the graveside and will also furnish the pallbearers. Interment will be in Myrtle Hill Cemetery. Survivors inelude his wife, Mrs. Erma H. Riddle of Tampa; one stepson, Headlee L.
Howard of Greenville, S. and three grandchildren. WATERS, Waters, G. who services Thurs- for passed away day near Frostproof, will be held at the Athens Baptist Church Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock with The Rev. Carl Story, assisted by The Rev.
Dudley Best and The Rev. J. N. Hendry, officiating. Interment will be in the Mt.
Pisgah Cemetery. The body will lie in state at the home Sunday from 9 A.M. until 2:30 P.M. The following will serve as pallbearers: T. B.
Perry, K. S. Cannon. D. G.
Bennett, Walter Crews, Elton Crews and Herman Ellis. Coker Funeral Home in charge of arrangements. CARD OF THANKS We wish to extend our heartfelt thanks and appreciation for the acts of kindness, messages sympathy and beautiful flowers received from our kind relatives, friends and neighbors during our recent grief in the loss of our beloved wife and mother. MR. M.
RODRIGUEZ AND FAMILY. WANTED! HARD TO FIT FEET I Walk-Over 122 Bootery Franklin A ANNUAL PLANTS Available Now PETUNIAS: Tall mixed, dwarf VERBENA: Hybrid large flowered mixed, white, rose, blue, pink, mixed. red, etc. Double Victorious ORNAMENTAL PEPPERS: Bird's mixed. Eye.
CARNATION: Chabaud Improved DAHLIA: Unwin dwarf mixed. mixed. ASTER: American branching LUPINE: King mixed. mixed. STATICE: Hybrids mixed.
SALVIA: St. John's Fire. PINKS: Double gaiety mixed. COLEUS: Giant leaf mixed. TOMATO: Marglobe certified CALENDULA: Pacific Beauty mixed.
PEPPER: California Giant. Better get what plants you want today or tomorrow. Some of the varieties listed may not be available again for several weeks. FLORATERIAS 3302 Bay-to-Bay Blvd. 8034 Nebraska Ave.
(Open Sunday) (Sulphur Springs) personally to him who was our guide and apostle, the founder of our country, Jose Marti," Dr. an Concheso concluded. of Staff Leaves Today Dr. Elwood C. Nance, president of the university, noted that the three-year contract would enable assistance to Cuban "asociados" in the technical school of aeronautics, already going on.
He said the contract was an outgrowth of a conversation from Willard Moor, now head of the university's electronics department, and its head of public relations, Capt. R. E. Bassler. Months of negotiations have ensued, and the university's technical representatives are to leave today for San Julian.
The program is expected to get under way in Oetober. In addition to Dr. Concheso's staff, Col. Jose M. Fernandez and other officers represented the Cuban air force at the banquet.
A number of Tampans interested in inter-American affairs were also present. Cabbie Reports Holdup By Passenger E. T. Quick, driver Yellow Cab Company, reported to police early this (Saturday) morning that a passenger he was driving whipped out a pistol and robbed him of $8 at Central and Oak. The gunman then ripped out the cab's radio mike before disappearing foot, the driver told detectives.
TAMPA TIRE CO. "YOUR FRIENDLY STORE" HUGE 12 cu. ft. 2-DOOR KE KELVINATOR MODEL MTD-120 Reg. $52995 -Less $13000 FOR YOUR OLD BOX, REGARDLESS OF SIZE OR CONDITION NOW nAnos 39995 GIANT 70-LB.
SEPARATE FOOD FREEZER COMPARTMENT SALES DOWN ONLY PAY 14 Big Refrigerator Storage Loads Aluminum Automatic est Space MONTHLY Other Shelves Compartment Roll-Out Defrosting Features NO PAYMENT UNTIL NOV. 10TH WE GIVE GREEN STAMPS "Our 16th Year YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD AT of Service to Personalized You." TAMPA TIRE CO. 1501 TAMPA ST. PHONE 2-0611 6.