THE REGISTER. GUARD, EUGENE,- OREGON
' Pace Six
H
I6H
CLIMBER
By DICK STRITE
Tsk, tsk!
Th idea. Mr. Nelson, of com'
paring University of Oregon athle
tes with WfA worKers:
in rase vou can't read, Stub
Nelson, former big-time California
sports writer and weekly sports
contributor to the Orcgonian's
Sunday magazine section, waved
his magic wand over blank news
tirint nnrl revealed football and
other major sports at the Univer
itv nf Oreeon as big business.
The casual reader and the fel-
inw u.hn follows his sports in o
point type and over the radio will
nrobablv wonder why Nelson fail
ed to mention other Pacific Coast
rnnference schools along with tne
Webfoots. Could it be that other
schools would not give him the in
formation that Oregon was un
afraid nf?
Maybe the school that paid an
athlete $1,500 in casn 10 register,
the other that housed a javelin
tosscr and gridder at the Biltmore
for some time, and still the other
that offered to double anything
Oreeon offered, didn't want their
mpthnri of subsidizing to be known
The fact that Oregon spends
of notatoes every school
vear for athletes' tuition, room and
hoard, is shocking to none. Hard
ly half as shocking as would the
total of the institution that pays
as high as $150 pen month for a
good halfback.
Bob Park, the blonde lad
you aee walking the street
with skin one shade lighter
than Smokey Whitfield's, .
came up north from southern
California and calls us a bunch
of sissies because we don't
know how to fish for tuna
the right way.
The southern brand of al
barore averages around 25
pounds as compared to the
northern 12-pounders. In spite
of the double weight, the Call
fornlans use six-ounce red
and six-strand (18 pound test)
line. Compare this to our
telephone poles and 35 to 80
pound test lines. Colonel BUI
Hayward Is going to have Bob
send for typical California
tuna tackle and the two of
them will have a go at Ore
gon's albacore.
The sport, Incldently, Is be
coming popular off the Wash
ington coast. f
Everyone is feeling mighty sorry
for Don Smith ... He had work
to do and missed his first opening-day
deer season hunt in eight
seasons . . . Besides the Oregon
WSC game, top contests involv
ing coast teams next Saturday will
be Alabama vs. U. S. C. and Wash
ington vs. Minnesota . . . Idaho
and Oregon State might furnish
fun at Corvallis, too . . . There
is a golf tournament opening in
Westchester, New York Thursday
for a $5,000 prize that has attract
ed so many golfers that the tour
nament committee is considering
adding 18 holes and an extra day
of play to the event making .18
holes for three straight days, taper
ed off with a pair of 36's Satur
day and Sunday . . . Henry Mc
Lemore says the winner will have
a bunion for every birdie . . .
Nomination for the hall of fame
Buck Newsom, who has won 18
games for the St. Louis Browns
. . . Here's one for Broadway
Jim: William H. Ford of Saratoga,
N. Y., got the feel of his driver,
irons and putter all at once the
other day and carded the follow
ing scores on par 4-5-3 holes
he shot 2-3-2 . . . Try that on
the 5th, 6th and 7th at the club next
Sundiiy.
Maybe Its the same Vandal
group that wanted to bet real
money that Idaho would brat
Oregon's hoopsters two
straight here last winter, but
we hear that up In Moscow
they consider the Oregon Slate
game at Corvallis this Satur
day a breather, a warm-up be
fore meeting stlffrr competi
tion at Seattle the following
week Washington. After
feeling the power of Minne
sota, perhaps the Huskies will
he ripe for Ted Bank's gang.
San Francisco, Sacramento Win Opening Coast Playoff Til
Seals Defeat
Hutchinson, 4-2
Senators Down Champ
Angels By 10-6 Count
PLAYOFF STANDINGS W
San, Francisco 1
Sacramento 1
Los Angeles .........O
Seattle 0
o l .onn
0 l ooo
1 .000
1 .too
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 21.
IA) The underdogs held the up
per hands today after initial
games in the Pacific coast base
ball league Shaughnessy playoffs
for $10,000 in prize money. -
The Sacramento Senators, who
wound up in third place in the
league standings at the end of
the scheduled season, were outhit
10 to 14 by the Los Angeles An
gels, league pennant winners, but
won the game, 10 to 6, by piling
up an early lead.
San Francisco s Seals, who got
into the playoffs by two per
centage points, nicked the Se
attle Suds pitching sensation, the
juvenile Freddie Hutchinson, for
nine hits to win, 4 to 2.
Two Sacramento home runs
helped the Senators win. The
Senators pushed over four runs
in the fourth, one in the sixth,
three more in the eighth and one
in the ninth.- The Angels rallied
in the last of the ninth to put
over five runs on as many hits,
but the Senators cut the uprising
short.
Lou Koupal outpitched Hutch-
nscn, but old Paid Ballou, the
Seals' relief pitcher who has
pulled more than a score of
games out of the fire for them
this season, was called upon in
the eighth to put down a Seattle
rally in the eighth when Koupal
lost control. A two-bagger by
Frankie Hawkins which sent two
runners home, gave San Francisco
its margin of victory in the sixth
inning.
Springfield Millers Have Veteran First
Team; Talented Backf ield May Make Grade
Oregon Field Trial
Set At Harrisburg
The fifth annual trial of the
Oregon Field Trial association
will be held on the association
grounds cast of Harrisburg on
Saturday and Sunday, September
24 and 25. These trials are held
for the purpose of aiding in the
development of high class bird
dogs, pointers and setters.
Dr. C. F. Millcson, secretary,
announces that entries have been
received from California, Idaho
and Washington in addition to
Oregon dogs that will be entered.
The derby stake will be run Sat
urday morning to be followed by
puppies and the shooting dog
stake. The open all-age stake
will be run on Sunday.
The Harrisburg grounds provide
ample room for the running of
the stakes and there arc plenty
of birds on the courses. A. E.
Naslund and H. B. Romnine of
Portland will Judge the puppy
stake. A. E. Haslund of Portlnnd
and Dr. Hill of Lebanon will
judge the derby stake and Dr.
Hill of Lebanon and Earl Fisk of
Portland the shooting dog stake.
The open all-age stake which
is open to any bird dog is for
a guaranteed purse of $150 and
will be Judged by H. B. Romaine
and Jake Garrison, both of whom
are experienced field trial judges.
This is the main event of the
moot.
Headquarters for the meet will
be at Ihe Harrisburg hotel. Dr.
W. B. Hare of Portland is presi
dent of the association.
SPRINGFIELD, Sept. 21 (Spe
cial) Coach Eldon Fix, starting
his second year as head man erf
the Springfield Millers, will have
an extra week of work under his
belt before joining his brother
coaches in the 1938 grid opening.
And according to all reports, the
Millers will be needing that ex
tra week of practice.
Fix lost two valuable players
through graduation, men who
were the backbone of both his de
fensive and offensive work Ar
nold Acheson, 200-pound plus
tackle, and Pete Taylor, triple
threat halfback. But that isn't
all Fix has to contend with he
lost six other lettermen of con
siderable value.
The Miller coach, however.
hopes to whip a team Into shape
which will hold its own with "B"
class opponents of the Greater
Willamette Valley league. He can
field a veteran club with the ex
ception of one tackle position a
team that averages 160 pounds,
158 in the line from end to end
and 163 in the backfield.
The potential starting lineup is
Gray and Ray, ends; Jordon and
Goddard, tackles; C. Meats and
E. Harwood, guards; Pollard, cen
ter; W. McPherson, quarterback;
Privat and L. Mcpherson, half
backs, and McCornack, fullback.
The entire squad of 31 men, on
the other hand, averages a mere
147 pounds 19 linemen at 148
and 12 backs at 146. Nearly all of
the reserves are inexperienced.
Webb McPherson, a tough 140
pound red-haired lad who can
pass, punt and run the ball, and
and Dan McCornack, 196 pounds
of fullbacking dynamite, are the
two key men of Fix' starting
backfield. Dave Privat, a versa
tile halfback who was out of
school last year, and LaVerne
McPherson, a two-year veteran
who was also out of school in
1937, present a formidable pair of
backs. Jerry Purdue, a Texas
transfer who can pass and run,
is a strong alternate for McCor
nack, and Harry Hughes, a trans
fer from Junction City, is another
alternate quarterback.
Fix will no doubt have acute
line trouble unless some of the
newcomers develop into veterans
before mid-season. Besides a de
cided weakness at the tackles,
the veteran guards are only one
deep and the ends are light and
squat, averaging about 5 feet, 8
inches.
Springfield's system has been
designed to fit the material with
a balanced line and a combina
tion of a semi-short punt and
ff $7x - ' I
rW ' '''-V S" "
Register-Guard photo, Wiltshire engraving.
DAN McCORNACK, 196-pound fullback shown above packing the
ball in typical style, will be a continual threat to opposing teams
when he lines up behind Coach Eldon Fix' Springfield line.
QUARTERBACKS
Webb McPherson 5-7 140
Jim PUer 5-6 132
Marry Hushes 5-7 140
HALFBACKS
Dave Privat 5-8 150
Ferrol Meats 5-6 140
Larry Phillips 5-6 117
Laurence Harwood 5-6 147
LaVerne McPherson -5-8 165
Rex McCready 582 157
Bruce Maxey 5-4 116
FULLBACKS
Dan McCornack 6- 198
Jerry Purdue . 5-0 153
CENTER
Ted Vail 6- 155
Bob Pollard 6-3 170
DOUR Frye 5-9 130
John Ratzeburg 5-8 140
ENDS
Dewey Ray
Charles Gray
Melvin Andrews .
Ray Barnes .
-.5-8
6-5-8
.5-5
wsi.
135
150
134
115
140
133
163
170
163
150
150
167
160
145
143
Exp.
1
1
0
0
0
1
semi-double wing backfield com
bination.' Fair weather will give the Mill
ers' a chance to toss the pigskin,
a type of offense Fix is depend
ing on mostly with the always
present threat of his 196-pound
fullback crashing the line.
Springfield will inaugurate the
use of its new football field, near
the Lincoln school, in the opening
John Carrels 5?
Jim Henneveck 5-9
TACKLES
Ed Jordon : 5-8
' Ralph Goddard 5-10
Dick Denning 5-8
Merle Brown 6-2
GUARDS
Earl Harwood 5-7
Cliff Meats 5-7
Willard Wlnkley 5-7
Erwin McGuire 5-8
Harr. . Knouf 5-8
game against Philomath, Septem
ber 30. The season's schedule, in
cluding two open dates, follows:
Sept. 30 Philomath, here.
Oct. 7 Junction Citv, there.
Oct. 14 U. H. S., there.
Oct. 21 open.
Oct. 23 Cottage Grove, there.
Nov. 4 open.
Nov. 11 Sweet Home, here.
Nov. 18 Roseburg, here.
Webfoots Turn to Defense;
W. S. C. to Depend on Passing
Wonder what happened to the
trio of Eugene high stars that were
promised bright grid futures at
Oregon State last season . . .
We find only one In the roster
Vic Scars, 190-pound, 6-foot-4
tackle ... Of course there is
also Jay Mercer nt the blocking
quarterback post, but he went from
Eugene to Corvallis via Portland
. . , Fritz Kramer would pro
bably sooner be going to Pullman
Friday to watch the Cougars play
Oregon than see his team take an
inevitable walloping from Mll
waukie . . . They're saying Jupi
ter Pluvius, one of the best stick
el's in the majors In recent weeks,
is winning the National league
pennant for the Pirates.
Loyola Eleven Crushes
Cal Tech, 51 To 0
LOS ANGELES, Sept. 21.
LoyolR university put the crush
er on a helpless Cal Tech eleven
last night and opened the 1938
college football season here with
a 51-to-0 victory at Gilmore sta
dium before 8,000 fans.
Baseball
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Chicago
t. Louis
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Milwaukie To Meet
EHS Here Friday
Any team that beats the always
strong McMinnville high school
football team by three touchdowns
must be good.
Eugene high faces such a lest
in the Axemen's 1938 premiere
Friday night on Hayward field.
Milwaukie high, coached jointly
by Merritt McKcel and Tommy
Swanson, will furnish Coach
Fritz Kramer's mammoth, but
green team with its initial opposi
tion. The game is scheduled for
7:30 p. m.
The invaders opened their 1938
season last Friday with a smash
ing 29-6 victory over the Griz
zlies, coached by Stan Riordan.
Kramer, who has yet to pick a
starting lineup, is planning his of
fense and defense against typical
Oregon State plays.
Officials for the tilt will be Ref
eree Lee Weber of Junction City,
Umpire Herb Colwell of the Uni
versity, and Head Linesman Al
Dielz of Eugene.
Del Kunkle Beaten
In Wrestling Tourney
PORTLAND. Ore., Sept. 21.
(U.R) George Godfrey, negro
grappler and former contender
for the world's heavyweight box
ing championship, s-cored a vic
tory over Purple Shadow in a
wrestling tourney last night.
Chief Thunderbird of Vancou
ver, B. C, eliminated Heinle Ol
son, and Chief Little Wolf scored
a win over Del Kunkle.
Offensive prowess isn't the only
thing in football, and so Tuesday
Coach Tex Oliver turned his at
tention to the defensive side of
the University of Oregon's pre
parations for Saturday's Pacific
coast conference opener against
Washington State at Pullman,
Coach Oliver took the Webfoots
into Hayward field and bolted the
gates, to keep out prying eyes, and
then gave a crew of third, fourth
ind fifth stringers the ball. In a
session which lasted almost three
hours the first and second strin
ger!, worked on defense.
The "scrubs" were using the
kind of plays Washington State is
expected to employ and had fair
success with them. Oliver inti
mated after the drill that work to
day and tomorrow would again
stress defense.
There was no morning practice
Tuesday and there will be no more
this fall, the Webfoot coach an
nounced. Grandstand coaches were locked
out of the stadium and the prac
tice, but they continued to pre
dict a "regular" Oregon lineup
containing at least nine lettermen.
Although Oliver made no fur
ther comment on what his first
string may be, grid "bugs" feel
certain that the starting lineup
Saturday will include, among
others, John Yorby and Vic Rcgin
ato at ends; Elroy Jensen at right
tackle; Jim Cadenasso nt center;
Hank Nilscn at quarterback, and
Frank Emmons at fullback.
Mel Passolt and Ccce Walden
are still even-stephen at right
guard, and Bill Foskett, Merle
Peters and Russ Inskeep are al
most on a par at left tackle. Both
Jim Nicholson and Jay Graybeal
are sure-fire at left half, with Ted
Gebhardt and Bob Smith certain
to see action at right half.
WASHINGTON STATE COL
LEGE, Pullman, Sept. 21. As the
Cougars take to the gridiron this
fall, forward passing is figured to
be one of Babe Hollingbcry's
sharpest weapons. Old talent com
bined with new will provide speed
and power in the backfield and
with those forces a strong passing
game will be set up. It is pointed
out by experts that to make an
aerial attack click, it is necessary
to pave the way with effective
ground work. Speed bursts and
line thrusts properly executed
place a team in position to shoot
through the sky.
Hollingbery usually has a potent
air offensive as shown by the fact
that more than half of the Wash
ington State touchdowns have
come by passes in the last three
years. The promise of a strong
running attack this fall gives like
promise of a profitable passing
game.
From last year's team three ex
pert riflemen are available in Ed
die Bayne, Paul Callow and Dick
Emerson. They all play the key
left halfback position and all are
excellent triple-threaters. From
the sophomore ranks other likely
bombers are expected to develop.
For receivers Hollingbery has such
veterans as John Klumb and Fred
Brown, ends; and Chub Holmes
and Cecil Welchko, backs. Dale
Gentry, the classy soph end from
Walla Walla, is a crack pigskin
catcher.
Summer Grid Camps
May Be Investigated
STANFORD UNIVERSITY,
Cal., Sept. 21. UP Attendance
of college football players at
summer training camps may be!
discussed by the faculty members i
cf the Pacific coast conference at j
the next regular meeting, Al Mas
ters, Stanford graduate manager!
said today.
National Net Tourney
Postponed Fifth Day
FOREST HILLS. N. Y.. Sept.
21. i! A record for consecu
tive washouts by rain was set to
day as the steady downpour
forced the fifth straight post
ponement of the national tennis
championships, now stalled in the
semi-finals.
The previous record was set
in 1933 when the tournament,
scheduled to finish on Saturday,
wound up on Thursday.
Step up your appear
ance but keep down
the cost
ERIC MERRELL
"Clothes for Men and Bon"
LIGHT
Wines
Port Tokay,
Muscatel,. Sherry
Pints 25c
ED'S WINE DEPOT
49 East Broadway
Open 7 A. SI. to 1 A. SL
First Mule Deer
Reported In Eugene
Seven more bucks, including the
first mule deer from eastern Ore
gon, were reported bagged by
local hunters the opening day of
Oregon's deer season.
Three mammoth animals were
brought into Babb's hardware,
including a three-pointer that
weighed 202 pounds shot by Alvin
Fogies. Other members of the
party. Irvin Libbke and Bill
Gieseke, bagged mule deer of
over 190 pounds, a four and a
five-pointer. The bucks were shot
about 25 miles from Burns.
Vernon H. and J. Nelson, Flor-
Wood In Chase
For PNA Crown
Eugene Pro Shoots 146;
O'Connell Picks Up
SEATTLE, Sept. 21. UP) Neil
Christian of Yakima held a one-
stroke lead over Stan Leonard,
Vancouver, B. C, and Al Zim
merman, Portland, as a field of
95 started the final 36 holes to
day in the Earlington golf club's
72-hole Pacific Northwest Open
golf tourney.
Christian won the tourney ill
1924, 1929 and 1932.
Christian matched par In yes
terday morning's round, 72, then
went seven under par in the
afternoon with a sizzling 65 for a
137 total. The Yakima profes-
sional had eight birdies in the
afternoon.
Leonard, pro and defending
champion, turned in a six-under-par
71-67 138 and Zimmerman,
another pro, had a pair of 69's to
tie the Canadian.
In all, ten players bested par,
and thiee more were a standoff
with perfect figures. Ken Storey,
Spokane, was low amateur with a
69-71140.
The golfing twins from Eugene,
Ore., Pro Wendell Wood and
Amateur Jim O'Connell, had
varied success. Wood 'remained
within striking distance of the
leaders with a 72-74 146, two
over par, but O'Connell picked
up.
Other results included:
Freddie Wood. Vanc'r. B. C 71-68140
Chuch Congdon. Tacoma 70-70140
Harold west. Chehalls 70-71141
xIack Wostlond. Seattle 71-70141
John Haetmer. Seattle 70-73143
Emery Zimmerman, Porland 71-72143
X Forest Watson, Seattle 70-74144
x August Kiffero. Rcnton 71-73144
Ken Tucker. Everett 72-72144
x Harold Salvador. Portland 71-74 145
Ted Longworth, Portland 74-71145
Wendell Wood. Eugene 72-74146
x Bud Haskell. Olympia 75-75150
Bill Palmberg. Astoria 74-77151
Gordon Richards. Seattle 78-73151
Walter Pursey. Seattle 75-76151
x Louis Cyr. Portland 78-74152
Howard Bonar. Astoria 77-77154
Robert No. .es. Roseburg 80-77157
x Allie Bowman, Portland ...80-80160
x Jim O'Connell. Eugene (Picked VP)
x Denotes Amateur.
Hostak Signed For
Championship Battle
SEATTLE, Sept. 21. (P) Nate
Druxman, Seattle promoter, had
Al Hostak's signature today to a
contract for a middleweight
championship bout here Novem
ber 1 and was looking around for
a likely opponent.
N. Y. Commission Okays
Featherweight Fight
NEW YORK, Sept. 21. (IP) The
New York boxing commission has
approved a 15-round fight be
tween Joey Archibald of Provi
dence, R. I., and Mike Belloise of
New York for the world feather
weight crown vacated recently by
Henry Armstrong.
No date, site or promoter has
been decided.
ence, brought in two mule deer
from Myrtle Park one 174
pounder and another 130 pounds
with a 27'2-inch spread.
Paul Ford, Eugene, brought a
159-pounder in from around
Prineville, one with a remarkable
spread for its size a six-pointer.
O. C. Bryant registered a 139
pound black tail in the Troeh
contest.
Sox, Tribe
Stage Battle
(By the Associated Press)
Even the Yankees' record los
ing streak can't stir up much in
terest since the New Yorkers
have clinched the pennant. The
fans won't be excitprt hn,,t u
National league race until the
Joe Gordon
WHAT BE DID TUESDAY
AB RBI H PO
3 0 0 1
HIS SEASON'S RECORD
Hitting
AB RBI H
413, 90 109
Fielding
PO A E
256 406 27
Pet.
.254
Pet.
.860
teams are able to come out from
under their umbrellas and play
a few games. But in the mean
time the Boston Red Sox and
Cleveland Indians are stirring
up quite a lively pair of private
battles.
Second place in the American
league is their main stake and
their leading representatives at
the home plate, Jimmy Foxx and
Earl Averill, are quite in the
thick of the fight for the batting
crown.
The Red Sox, returning to ac
tion Tuesday after having had
two straight doubleheaders washed
out, regained a little lost ground
by walloping the St. Louis Browns
in both ends of a bargain bill,
12-8 and 7-2. The Indians took
a single game from Washington.
9-1.
The orily other game played
saw the Yankees establish a new
record for Joe McCarthy's man
agerial regime by losing their
fifth straight game, a 5-4 decision
to the Chicago White Sex.
The entire National league pro
gram again was rained out.
.
"Mary Ann" Returned
To Willie Turnesa
PITTSBURGH, Sept. 21 OP)
Willie Turnesa's "Mary Ann,"
charmed putter which he lost in
the excitement of winning the
National Amateur golf cham
pionship, speeded to Turnesa's
home in Elmsford, N. Y., today
aboard a mail train.
An unidentified man telephoned
a Pittsburgh newspaper last night
and admitted he had picked up
the putter and that it was on its
way to the amateur champion.
ruu.. n
raiiy m
Scores M
-Haired Girl s
Favored " Nation
f"f ring ha,r
ably Jack Dem h?e -
golf has Z J? 1
looking Pattv n. ' .."?. k-j
Miss Bers with i.
frecki.H V.lth.hnJ hi-
starts swinging
is ruthless. i . lie
wst 42 shots at K5r
Countrv Bestttt
Smothpre1 r ' iUcJ. ri
Wash ns,on T'
crushing; h'-'M
shadowed eveiyS VX1
round flight, indud Hhl
of the six-t m f-. . "1
f!i.m. n..7;V '""""'tea
..uueu van; It m;
the performance of
N. r nL01
- -., ..... framing cnaBal
ehrmnating the CanadiJ J
holder. Mr r-;. 1
Lambton Mills, Ont tin;
year-old Dorothy KirbyofiJ
As the field nf n
u- auriisri
away on the second and ".
flights of two 18 hole rom
, i.i,oin,m rm-reaii
Mrs. Page, 31-year-old bnaJ
c,c iduMng lavorues to v.1
as finalists for the chanti"
Saturday.
87 De Correvonf To
Make Collegiate GfiJ
Debut Saturday
CHICAGO, Sept. 2!J
De Correvont, the nation'i
highly publicized 1937 prep
ball player, will gallop sgii
urday on a college gridiron.
While Iowa headed for 6
tersectional game at Los ka
and Minnesota girded itst!
Washington's Huskies. Rli
football interest around cj
centered on "the kid" and S
western's coming freshes:'
sity game.
In it De Correvont vil :
his collegiate debut as the :
men's left halfback.
Arrival of 2nd Mat Newcome
Causes Owen to Book 4 Mafdi
The unexpected arrival of a sec
ond newcomer to northwest mid
dleweight circles, Tex Riley of
Tennessee, caused Promoter Herb
Owen to shift his supporting card
to the world junior light-heavyweight
battle which will feature
Thursday's, armory show.
Owen has decided to stage an
other four-star event with Pat
O'Dowdy introducing Riley, a fast,
clean, scientific grappler in tne
first of three 30-mlnute support
ing matches.
Sailor Moran will tangle j
"Dopey," of the Arkansas sa
Ernie Piluso ws
.Tnco Rnririmiez. Florida iiw
in the other 30-minute matis
Harllinine the Drogram, t
rnhnnr world champs
match sanctioned by the 4
w,.AcHiff neenriation. accortt
Owen, will match Champioc J
4w and rhallenltr 'A
of the Blue Mountain KM
Achiu was rated a 5-tM
by local betting MmmisOTes
famous Gold Medlsia ll
' American History TArll "
Iff Al an MprfMlon pi apprrclallon wrthe gift el WJI I
II Ihe Steam.hlpVanderbllt In March 1881. I 'III I ifiV
II Cnnar, preitnlrd to Commodore Cornellut liflll I I'
M
7C
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every way, you'll say tbat tkis is a whiskey
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Ju. Btixliy A Co., Ltd.. rri: rvtrHt: Ntsfan FaIU, Ontario;
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Fill 90 Prtef
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U'lNlill I. II.V11M T.l
"THE VERY THOUGHT
OF DRIVING THAT DIS
TANCE TIRES ME OUT.'
YS! WOUlW
IT BE GUANO n
MM IT WS'-
and miss
TRY THE fW
II
THAT'S A GREAT IDEA! LET S
CALL SOUTHERN PACIFIC AND
SEE HOW MUCH IT COSTS.
(LATER-OX THE TUB
"THIS IS THE lift
ON I'M TRAVELING
EASY,AIR-C0NDIT10Nf!''
SAN FRANCISCO
LOS ANGtLLS .
To arrive there rested and
ready for the big things , Couthtra P"
you've planned to do in California, try
r . ,i u. ,v eniov low cost
train, iouu reiax j.woilis0
meals, lOr and 15, Tray Food Serv.ee ""JJ.
fortable berth. Example of our bargain roundtnp
52130 S 2
tH"'
.ndreclioing"''
Soutbefl
Pacific
c. j """S'1"
I know vy I
I ,.ri nt,ud'' iVERV I
I f les-cr,0Fd . . I
1. enourPocificl.ne '
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