THE MICHIGAN DAILY r r..rwW ZVU Defeats Vlinnesota, Illinois Triumph' [n Upsets of Indiana, Army Iowa in Thriller r i LIEES&~ Cards Face Browns Today While Packers Host Lions By The Associated Press M IOWA CITY, Iowa - North- western halfback Ray Purdin car- ried an intercepted fourth quar- ter pass back 42 yards for a touch- down to erase defending cham- pion Iowa's lead and give the Wildcats a 14-10 Big 10 victory yesterday. The comeback triumph was ac- complished without the services Softhe Wildcat's great quarterback Dick , Thornton who suffered a sprained ankle returning the open- ing kickoff and sat out the game. Purdin's interception of sopho- more quarterback Wilburn Hollis' pass came only minutes after Iowa end Don Norton had grabbed Ron Burton's bobble of a handoff and dashed 47 yards to give the Hawkeyes a 10-7 lead. Illinois Turns . Tables CHAMPAIGN, Ill. - Illinois came .up with its own version of the lonely end formation made famous by Army to upset the fourth ranked Cadets, 20-14 yes- terday before a thundering crowd of 64,891. Quarterback Mel Meyers not only kept the Illini moving with, his sharp passing but also proved to be a winning gambler. Twice in the game Meyers chose to run in- stead of kick on fourth down situ- ations to keep Illini drives moving toward eventual touchdowns. Illinois surprised Army with its new formation. The Illini would send -a right end to the left side BIG TEN STANDINGS L T'P Pt Purdue Dumps Irish LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Purdue's football team, always at its best against Notre Dame, hammered the Irish yesterday for the fourth time in six years, 28-7. Bob Jarus, Purdue's bulldozer fullback, scored two of the touch- downs that gave the Boilermakers a 21-0 Mead at the half. Badgers Roll MADISON, Wis. - Wisconsin's. football Badgers tuned up for the rugged Big Ten schedule by trampling their "cousins" from Marquette for the 16th straight year 44-6 yesterday as Dale Hack- bart and Billy Hobbs each con- tributed a pair of touchdowns. Hackbart, an All-America quar- terback candidate, turned in a brilliant first half despite a heavi- ly-bandaged left knee and then let sophomore Jim Bakken carry most of the load in the final two periods. By HAL APPLEBAUM The Chicago Cardinals, a dark- horse in the Eastern Division, will try to establish themselves as con- tenders when they take on the favored Cleveland Browns at Sol- diers Field in Chicago this after- noon. The Cardinals, winners of only two games last season, showed considerable improvement throughout the exhibition season and then opened the NFL season with a show of power last week trouncing the Washington Red- skins, 49-21. Browns Trail The Browns, on the other hand, who have been favored all along to win the Eastern title, find them- selves one game behind the Cardi- nals before today's action begins. Last Saturday night the Browns, after leading at the half were then completely frustrated by the Pitts- burgh Steelers and Bobby Layne, going down to defeat 17-7. BOB JARUS .. . tallies twice for Purdue Southern Methodist Sinks Navy, 20-7-; Nebraska Edges Out Oregon State, 7-6 Northwestern Michigan State Minnesota Indiana Wisconsin Purdue MICHIGAN Iowa Illinois Ohio State Next We -W L 1. 0 IV 0 1 0 1 10 0 0 0 0 0p1 0 1 0 0 0' 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 per. S. 1.000 14 1,000 34 1.000 24 .500 34 .000 0 .000 0 .000 8 .0.0 10 .000 0 .000 0 Intercepted passes - one forv 95 yards by Tirey Wilemon - brought Southern Methodist a 20-7 victory over Navy yesterday. Ken Lowe grabbed a batted pass out of the air to set up the second SMU touchdown in the third peri- od. Then, with Navy deep into M e t h o d i s t territory, Wilemon bobbed up to take Jim Maxfield's throw on the SMU five and race to the insurance touchdown with only 48 seconds left. * * * Nebraska Edges Oregon State Nebraska beat the halftime.gun with a touchdown and conversion point and rode the 7-0 intermis- sion lead to a 7 to 6 triumph over Oregon State in an intersectional football clash before 28,000.. A four yard pass from iron man quarterback Harry Tolly to half- back Carroll Zaruba made good, the second quarter TD effort for Nebraska. Pitt Upsets UCLA Quarterback Ivan Toncic held his fire until the final minutes yesterday and then threw three perfect touchdown passes to sweep Pitt to a nerve-racking 25-21 vic- tory over UCLA. There was less than a minute to play and UCLA led .21-18 when Toncic passed to Steve Jastrzemb- ski for the final touchdown. LSU Swamps Baylor With halfback Bill Cannon flashing his All-America form, Louisiana State's National Cham- pions turned the State Fair- grounds' into a scoring carnival yesterday and routed Baylor 22-0 before 30,000 fans. The 205-pound Cannon galloped 50 yards with an intercepted pass for his touchdown and set up an- other LSUtally with a 35-yard sprint in' the first quarter, Sooners Back in Forin Oklahoma blended near perfect passing with a strong running game and routed Colorado 42-12 in a Big Eight Conference foot- ball opener yesterday. Coach Bud Wilkinson's Sooners now have gone through 73 confer- ence games without a defeat. It was their 70th victory with only two ties included in the winning streak. FOOTball Arkansas beat Texas Christian 3-0 in a steady rain on a second- period 28-yard field goal by Fred- dy Akers. Hard-running halfback Darrell Williams set the Razorbacks up for the only score of this dripping wet Southwest Conference game with a 23-yard run after Arkansas took over on the TCU 40 when Leslie Letsinger recovered a fumble. rek's Games Oregon State at MICHIGAN Michigan State at Iowa Illinois at OSUV Marquette ;at Indiana Wisconsin at Purdue of the line, about 10-15 yards wide, thereby leaving the opposite tackle eligible. The lonely end would go deep while the halfback in motion would go about 10 yards past the. line of scrimmage and grab the pass. Using this formation both to the right aid to the left, Meyers found the Army defense easy to cut into with his rifle like passes. Gophers Tset loosders AMNEAPOLIS - Minnesota's Gophers, prostrated by 14 defeats in 16 games rose and smashed In- diana, 24-14, yesterday with a wide open attack that left the Hoosiers paralyzed until it was too late. With its hefty, aggressive line holding Indiana to two first downs through the first three quarters, the Gophers turned loose their splashiest offensive show in years to win their Big Ten inaugural be- fore a crowd of 52,927 at 'sunlit Memorial Stadium. SERIES MOVES TO L.A.: Drysdale vs. ;Donavan in Third Tilt For the Browns slight favorites to beat the Cards, this is a must game. A loss would put them two games behind and seriously jepro- dize their chances of winning the divisional title. The double wing offense of the Cardinals will be run by King Hill, who performed masterfully in his first starting appearance last week, while the running attack is spear- headed by John Crow and Bobby Jo Conrad; the surprise hero of last week's contest, who scored an amazing total of 25 points to quickly establish himself as the league's leading scorer. Today's Top Game The durable Jim Brown,.the key to the Browns' attack, will provide a tough challenge for the refur- bished defensive wall of the Cardi- nals, in what should be the top game on this afternoon's slate. Last year's Eastern champions the New York Giants travel to Philadelphia to take on the Eagles this afternoon. With ageless Charley Conerly at the helm, the Giants upset the Los Angeles Rams, 23-21, last weekend to establish themselves as serious contenders again this year. The Giants' all veteran attack is expected to keep the Eagles more than busy all afternoon. The Eagles will be trying to bounce back from a defeat at the hands of the San Francisco '49ers last Sunday. The Eagles have veteran Norm Van Brocklin at quarterback, but the rest of their horses aren't up to those in the Giants' camp. The surprising Pittsburgh Steel- ers will complete the Eastern Divi- sion action when they meet the Washington Redskins in Washing- ton. The Steelers will be riding on the crest of their upset victory over the Browns last week, while the Red- skins will be facing an uphill bat- tle following last week's defeat at the hands of the Cardinals. Steelers Favored With Layne leading the way, the Steelers aren't expected to en- counter too much difficulty against the 'Skins. In the Western Division the Green Bay Packers, straight from their upset of the highly rated Chicago Bears, are planning a hot reception for the Detroit Lions in Green Bay this afternoon. The Packer defense, which held the Bears to two long field goals, should give the Lions a tough time. Rounding out the action will be a West Coast battle between the Rams and the '49ers in San Fran-; cisco. Bears Beat Baltimore BALTIMORE () - Quarterback John Unitas of the Baltimore Colts threw three last period touchdown passes last night, but they weren't enough to overcome his earlier troubles and the Chicago Bears held on for a 26-21 victory. The Bears posted all their points before Unitas got clicking to run his National Football League rec-' ord of at least one touchdown a game to 27 straight. It was the first loss in two games this- season for the defending champion Colts and the Bears evened their record. The capacity Memorial Stadium crowd of 57,557 never saw Unitas experience a worse time than he did in the first half when he com- pleted only 3 of 12 passes and had' as many intercepted. Richie Petition returned the first interception 33 yards for a Bear touchdown. The second by Erich Barnes set up a 33-yard field goal by John Aveni, who also booted a 42-yarder in the third period. SCORES GRID PICKS MSU 34, MICHIGAN 8 Illinois 20, Army 14 Northwestern 14, Iowa 10 Minnesota 24, Indiana 14 Purdue 28, Notre Dame 7' Wisconsin 44, Marquette -# Oklahoma 42, Colorado 12 Kansas 28, Boston 7 Nebraska 7, Oregon State 6 Georgia Tech 16, Clemson 6 Duke 42, Rice 7 South Carolina ,30, Georgia 14 N. Carolina 20, N. Carolina State 12 Arkansas 3, TCU 0 SMU 20, Navy 7 Texas 33, California 0 Pittsburgh 25, UCLA 21 Oregon 14, Washington State 6 Pennsylvania 13, Dartmouth 0 Syracuse 29, Maryland 0 OTHER SCORES:, LSU 22, Baylor 0 Oklahoma State 27, Kansas State 21 Mississippi 43, Memphis State 0 Auburn 35, Hardin-Simmons 12 Tennessee 22, Mississippi State 6 FOR RENT LARGE, attractive rooms for weekend guests. 1002 Hutchins Ave. Call Mrs. Harold Andrus at NO 8-7493 or NO 3-0765. C69 FURNISHED Apartments for 2, 3 or 4. S. Division near William. NO 8-6059. C71 SOUTH FOREST-:Large 6-room fur- nished apt. $105 including utilities. NO 3-2800. C67 GEDDES-FOREST AREA-2-room fur- nished apt. 1st floor. $75. NO 3-2800. C66 DOUBLES ONLY. Linens furnished. Only J block from Law Quad at 804 S. state (at Hill). C64 WANTED: Girl to share apartment. $35 monthly including utilities. i block from Campus. Call NO 3-7242, ask for Nellie or Carloss at NO 8-7942. 063 TWO BLOCKS from campus, unfur- nished 3 rooms and bath. New wal to wall carpeting, refrigerator, stove, heat and water furnished. This is perfect for faculty member or teach- ing fellow who appreciates clean and quiet. $115 per month. 905 Oak- land Ave. C61 GIRL'S large single room on campus, kitchen privileges, automatic laundry, T.V., parking. Call NO 5-5523. C60 ROOMS FOR RENT in a quiet house. Large closets - linens furnished. NO 5-5428. C57 FURNISHED ROOM in quiet home, semi-private bath and phone. 1208 Prospect St. Phone 2-0648 evenings. C55 CAMPUS ROOMS, large quiet singles, doubles, linens furnished. Reason- able. NO 3-4747. C2 FURNISHED student rooms: Male - 2 singles at $10, 1 double $14-linen, near Packard and Hill. NO 2-8372. C3 812 PAULINE, 3 rooms and bath, gas heat, Oct. 1. $75. Clean and attrac- tive. NO.3-6415 or Pontiac, FE 2-661. C5 FOUR ROOM, two bedroom apartment. $125. All utilities included. Private entrance. NO 2-7531. C14 ON CAMPUS One block. Modern apartments. 514 S. Forest. Also rooms. NO 2-1443. C25 PARKING Space and garage.514 s. Forest. NO 2-1443. C26 LARGE ROOM, single 8 per week. HU 2-4959, 5643 Geddes Road. C35 FURNISHED campus apts. for 3-4 single students. Pvt. bath. $105-$150 per month. 344 S. Division St., NO 3-8134. C30 CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES FOREIGN CAR SERVICE We service all makes and models of Foreign and Sports Cars. Lubrication $1.25 Nye Motor Sales 514 E. Washington Phone NO 3-4858 C-TED STANDARD SERVICE Friendly service is our business, Atlas tires, batteries and accessor- ies. Warranted & guranteed. See us for the best price on new & used tires. Road service--mechanic on duty. "You expect more from Standard and you get it!"' 1220 S.. University at Forest NO 8-9168 S Protect your car il * Fall Changeoverj *Antifreeze . Winter Lubrication Complete Tune-up Service Available GOLDEN'S SERVICE STATION 601 Packard NO 8-9429 S3 WHITE'S AUTO PAINT SHOP Bumping and Painting 2007 South State NO 2-3350 82 MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS Make Grinnell's your headquarters for RCA, Magnavox, Zenith, Webcor, and radio, T.V. and stereo. GRINNELL'S HELP WANTED HELP WANTED: WAITRESS-Full Time Nights after Five. Inquire - Brown Jug. )H31 WANTED: Part-time male or female telephone operators. Arthur Murray's. NO 2-5539. H27 FOREIGN CAR SALESMEN Part-time--commission-must have own'car-familiarity with sports or foreign ears preferable-some retail sales experience. Write % Michigan Daily. Box 3. )H25 WANTED: Part & full time saleswomen at the BlIt. Dillon Shop on Forest off S. Univ. H23 HELP WANTED-Sales Representatives in Men's Dorms. Must be a member of respective house in dorm. Contact Chuck, NO 2-3241 1-5 P.M. H19. BABY SITTER NEEDED for one four year old, Monday and Wednesday afternoons 12:45-3:15 p.m. during fal semester. Call NO 5-5585 anytime, H116 CERTIFIED TEACHER to work with kindergarten age children. Hrs. 11:30 to 5:30 p.m. Call NO 8-7282. After six call NO 2-36,17. I H18 WANTED-Experienced Arthur Murray teachers, full or part time. NO 2-5539.. 1311 S. University. H1O BUSINESS SERVICES TYPEWRITER . sales, service, and rentals. That's our business.. MORRILL'S at 314 South State Street across from, the dime store. MORRI LL'S 314 S. State St. NO 3-2481 )J27 'TYPIST SEEKS WRITER. Object: $2.00 an hour. HUnter 2-1155. )J35 FOR TODAY'S breakfast why not buy some lox, cream cheese, bagels, onion rolls, or assorted Danish pastry? Plan ahead also . . . later in the week we'll have smoked whitefish, gefitle fish, kosher soups, pastrami, and corned beef. Shop at Ralph's for these delicious: foods. RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard N02-3175 MAYNARD & SE*GER WELDERS and BLACKSMITHING 109 S. Ashley NO 8-7403 J3 Headquarters for garden repair Lawn rakes Lawn carts Grass seed Fertilizers Muehlig & Lanphear 311 S. Main St. J ONE-DAY SERVICE AT SANFORDS . Shoe Repairing Hat Cleaning Tailoring Pressing - Shoe Shining 119 East AnnnStreet? Open Til 8 P. M. - Also Sundays & Holidays (Opposite court house since 1927) NO 8-6966 J2 WASHINGS and/or ironings. Free pick- up and delivery. Specializing in cot- ton dresses, NO 2-9020. AA1 Got the Lawrence Welk fever? Come in aid take lessons in our private studio. 120 bass accordion for only $10 per month. All pay- ments apply on purchase. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING LINES 2 3 4 ONE-DAY .8" .'96 1.12 SPECIAL TEN-DAY RATE .39 .47 .54 We We Believe Sell The Outstanding Foreign Cars Figure 5 average, words to a line. Call Classified between 1 :00 and 3:00 Mon, thru Fri. and 9:00 and 11:30 Saturday'- Phone NO 2-4786 PERSONAL TEPS ARE TOPS. P29 FOR SALE FOR SALE: CAMERA, Voigtlander Vi- te2a 1:4F2 lens, light meter. Call NO 2-3191. Ask for Mark Lutvak. IB34 FOR SALE: One iron bunk bed, one inner spring mattress. Cali NO 5-5130 or NO 2-2877. 331 FOR SALE: 1956 NSU motorcycle, 250 c.c., good condition, $250. Call NO 3-1759. B28 DISPOSING of part of my large library at private. sale. There are books of special interest to student teachers on many subjects. Showings 617 Packard St. from 11 A.M. to 4 P.M. every day except Sunday. B21 1958 TRAILER. 44x8', 2 bedroom. $500 down, take ove payments. Call South Lyons, GE 7-7192. B25 PORTABLE MONITOR washing ma- chine. Cabinet style. Perfect condi- tion. $40. NO 3-9670. B LET ME HELP YOU furnish that apart- ment, 17" TV, excellent picture, $125. Also ironing board, iron, fry pan, carving. set, steak knife set, bread- box, canister set, 3 portable radios, tape recorder and record playet. See at 1043 Ferdon or call NO 2-3617 aft- er 6 P.M. B16 EVERGREENS: eMichaelLee, an em- ployee of, chem stores, raises juni- pers, yews, arborvitae, etc., as a hobby, and sells them at wholesale or less, $2.50 to $5.00. Call NO 8-8574. 39 FOR SALE-Duo-Therm oil heater,, bar- rels, tubing, etc. Call NO 5-5145 days. B USED CARS --DRIVE THEM! --COMPARE THEM! By The Associated Press LOST ANGELES - A roaring crowd of 92,000-plus, the largest ever to see a World Series game, is expected to greet the Los Angeles Dodgers today as they return to the Coliseum all even with the Chicago White Sox going into the third game. Don Drysdale (17-13), the strike- out leader of the majors with 242, is scheduled to pitch for the Dodg- ers against Chicago's Dick Dono- TAU EPSILON PHI announces, RUSH OPEN HOUSE Sunday-7:00- 10:30 Monday-7:00-9:30 Tuesday-7 :00 - 9:30 HILLEL FOUNDATION . ,.,1429 Hill Street van (9-10), in a battle of right' handers. Game time is 1 p.m. Local time 4 p.m. EST. After their 4-3 victory in Friday's game at Chicago, the Dodgers were made 11 to 10 series favorites. Calif ornia has waited many, many years for a World Series. Finally it has arrived. It will be played in the huge uncovered foot- ball stadium that serves as a grotesque home park for the Dodg- ers. The 42-foot screen stretching from the 251-foot foul line into left center offers a target unique in the major leagues. After Friday's game in Chicago, Manager Walter Alston was; asked if the Coliseum wouldn't give his Dodgers a tremendous advantage. "No, not a hell of a lot," he said. "The only thing is that we are used to the thing (screen) and they are not. That is the only advantage, except the usual chance to get last licks." Drysdale is a side-arming right hander who was the sensation of the National League at the mid- season mark but slumped in the last half. In fact, the tailspin started after he had earned the distinction of starting two All-Star games in the same year. The handsome 23-year-old Cali- fornian from suburban Van Nuys lost six in a row before he shut out Philadelphia Sept. 9. However, he was knocked out of the box by both the Chicago Cubs and the Braves in the final games. He was the starter of the second playoff game, finally won by the Dodgers in 12 innings. Donovan drew the Coliseum as- signment over left hander Billy Pierce (14-15) who has been the ace of the Sox staff until Early. Wynn and Bob Shaw took over this year. Apparently, Lopez didn't want to risk a southpaw in the Coliseum where Cincinnati's Joe Nuxhall and Chicago's Art Ceccar- elli are the only left handers, who ever have beaten the Dodgers with complete winning games. The 32-year-old Donovan is strictly a "stuff" pitcher who banks heavily on the slider and the sinker, taught to him by Whit Wyatt when both were in Atlanta. Donovan was 5-5 in July but missed almost a month from July 21 to Aug. 16 due to a pulled muscle in his right shoulder. Donovan came through with a "big game" against Cleveland when the White Sox practically wrapped up the pennant by beat- ing the Indians four straight. He shut out the Tribe with five hits, Aug. 29 although he lost a 2-1 game to them Sept. 6 after taking a 1-0 lead in the ninth. In his last effort he worked five scoreless relief innings, allowing only one hit in Detroit, Sept. 25 after the pennant was clinched. The Dodgers were fed up with all the talk about the Go-Go Sox, especially after they had cut down Sherm Lolar at the plate with the potential tying run in the second game. "Go Go Sox," yelled Clem La- bine. "Suddenly they are the slow, slow Sox." Charlie Neal, who hit two hom- ers and drove in three of the runs in Friday's victory, is the leading Dodger hitter with a .444 average. The only extra bases of the Dodg- ers' 17 hits were Neal's two hom- ers and. the pinch homer by Chuck Essegian, the ex-Stanford football player, that tied the score in Fri- day's game. A few examples of our many choice buys ... '56 DKW, blue and gray, $995. '56 VW, a good little beetle, $1,195 '59 VOLVO, demo, white with every- thing . . . save $200 on this\one. '57 HILLMAN, $1,095. Mich. European Car Corp. Liberty at Ashley NO 5-5800 N16 1952 HUDSON WASP club coupe, good body and paint, radio and heater, $225 sale or trade. Ihone NO 2-6268 or NO 3-9094. N15 MGA, '56. Wire wheels, Motorola, strong Arnolt heater. Driven regularly, good condition. Call Detroit, TUxedo 51801. Grosse Pointe Farms. N14 RENAULT DAUPHINE '57, Black. Ex- cellent condition. GL 3-1072. )B18 ROOM AND BOARD- UPPER CLASSMEN or grads; linens furnished, also board.' 1319 HIUl St. near Forest, NO 2-6422. l REALL ESTATE $18;500 4 bedroom (or 3 with study) ranch, near schools. Air-conditioned, wall- to-wall carpeting, drapes. Gas heat, Land contract or 4W/o F.K.A. Fi- nancing. NO 3-0774 after 6 P.M. R BUSINESS PERSONAL "PSYCH MAJORS"-want to "observe"? Visit Lumbards. LUMBARD'S 1225 S. University NO'2-0743 )FF1l MEtETING A.F.S. returnees -- Wesley Foundation In 1st Methodist Church, Oct. 6, 7:15 P.M. FF14 WANTED: Exchange baby-sitting; half- day each spouse. We prefer mornings. Call NO 2-9385. FF35 BEFORE YOU BUY a class ring, look at the official Michigan ring. Burr Patterson and Auld Co., 1209 South University, NO 8-8887. 'F11 SINGING AND SPEAKING; class or pri- vate lessons. Carol F. Westerman, NO 8-6584. FF1 a ? >: x # i v Y. P . ?: Y S TRADITION -,a musem-ys, ichganhasitsfai saroftaionAd t o at - - * a *t " -a "The beef-birds we serve in the dorm come from- an old family recipe." THE ENGIN ARCH, the "M" on the diag, the lions near, the museum--yes, Michigan has its fair share of trad'ition. And in' keeping with this college spirit, we at KwiK 'Ns KLEEN N f!; k* Y;? 4.S x !r r tr. J!..'J f:1 Jf;A .lf JA" f:'l J,.J t y; ti GRINNELL'S' 323 S. Main NO 323 S. Main NO 8-7312 X8 8-7312 J33 PIANOS-ORGANS NEW & USED Ann Arbor Piano & Organ Co. 213 E. Washington NO 3-3109 X2 Grinnell's 80th anniversary specials -See the four speaker portable, stereo. Regularly $89.95, Now $69.95. GRINNELL'S LOST AND FOUND LOST: Black Clutch Bag, Friday night, vicinity of Division & Williams. Re- ward. Call Univ. Ext. 446- before 5 P.M.. or NO 3-3895. Ask for Miss Sher- man.A MISCELLANEOUS FALL SAILORS-Moth Class very nice -Call HU 2-5945. Ml BARGAIN CORNER ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords-$7.95; socks 39c; shorts 69c; military supplies. Sam's Store, 122E. Washington. Wi. 323 S. Main NO 8-7312 X7 ANN ARBOR'S NEW SELF SERVICE LAUNDRY OPEN 24 HOURS TAPE RECORDERS Revere-WebCor-Ekotape Parts and Service for almost all makes. MUSIC CENTER 300 S. Thayer St. NO 2-2500 X Get off the campus beat - come down to Grinnell's and save $1.00 on all classical records, including London, RCA, Decca, Columbia, etc. GRINNELL'S I'll never get this place in saw Sec- ;{ 'i A. ': '"k .yr :..,j L Air Conditioned WASH 20c Coin Operated DRY 10c 323 S. Main NO 8-7312 X9 A . Complete line of HiFi components including kits; complete service on irdio. nhornanhs and THPI eaulp- A ~ ~ I II II