Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, September 12, 1956, Page 25, Image 25

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    .Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, September 12, 1956
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL
Section 4 Page-1
W ashington Senator Move to California
in SF
Rumored
s
ports
By CHUCK BOICE
proSfnX. N hh L.S. Ange'eS' CI,Uck Esscgian' the lP hitti"S
Sge or invito 7 "vost league considering average, power, altitude,
age or anything else, said his baseball future was in the hands of the
tip
CIIUCi: ESSEGIAN
-. at a crossroaj
.. ,. , ,
ma vim: we roaas nave a mucn better look than for most He can
continue what is now a very promising baseball career or he can go
7. "-""" uiiviuy uaving a lour-year degree in biology in his pocket,
Actually, he could do both for awhile.
meres anotner possibility and
as a iryoui lung at it wouldn t bother his schooling. That's profes
sional football.
Rams Would Probably Like to See Him
Los Angeles holds his draft rights and we've a hunch the Rams
would be very happy to have him show up tor a tryout. They
may hesitate with some alter four autumns away from the game
but here's an athlete who has remained in sports and is of the
non-smoking, non-drinking, alwavs-in-shnne Ivne.
Doubtless there are many football players who would hesitate
taking up that rugged game after such a layoff but that part of it
ia just iiuc wiui jLsfgian. ne wouiu love to givje it a try.
As for his original decision of baseball over football, he thinks
he probably made the right move no. matter whaf his future in the
game.
"Of course you can second-guess
umiK you snouia. men mere s still a possibility of some pro football."
As for bis tryouts in the Coast league with Sacramento, Essegian,
typically, has no complaints. He docs make it clear, however,
that spring training and couple of games during the regular sea
son isn't enough to let one know whether or not he really can
hack the PCL.
Esscgian'.T athletic career dates back to L.A.'s Fairfax high,
in the shadow of the Hollywood Stars' Gilmnre Field, where he played
baseball and football the latter as a tailback in the single wing.
'51 and the Rose Bowl
From there it was Mcnlo JC and Stanford. The big football year
was '51 when Stanford won the title and went to the Rosp Bowl. The
team included Gary Kerkorian, Bill McColl and Bob Mathias, the
decathaldn wonder whom Chuck terms . . . fan athlete good at
anything after just a couple of workouts."
While thumped by IUinojs in the
x-aavgiau won i give a uig euge 10 Dig len iooiDau. ,
"We beat their next best outfits, Michigan and Ohio State,
that year. When Gary (Kerkorian) was injured in the Rose Bowl
we'd had It. I think on another day we might have beaten them."
His Stanford athletic career wound up on a high note as he led
the Stanford team to t he '5.1 Coast title.
Essegian expressed considerable appreciation to the Salem fans,
Hugh Luby and his teammates for helping him have what he modestly
termed "one of those good years."
As for the "bean bails" , Essegian just shrugs them off. No gripes
there or anything else ... in baseball, lhat is. In football he's ready
and willing to take the stand for the PCC athletes recently penalized
by the conference fathers after they had been permitted by the schools
to live under a system for which the athlete was made to share
the most blame.
Esscgian may be aiming for some (rlple-A left field fence
next year. He may be with the Senators after school Is out. It
may be just school or even a July tryout with the Rams.
Whatever the future is, the big guy has had quite a year ... and
he's quite a gap.
Whitman Next for the Ems?
Sure to get a big play for the managerial job with Eugene Em
eralds, from which Cliff Dapper was just booted, is Dick Whitman.
He's currently manager ot the third place San Jose Red Sox in the
Cal State league and formerly with Portland, Brooklyn, Philadel
phia. Montreal and St. Paul.
The former Wondburn Legion star not only attended the Uni
versity of Oregon but wintered in Eugene much of his baseball
career. The 36-year-old outfielder very possibly wilt lead his
league In hitting and not only was named as an all-star outfielder,
but was selected as the most valuable player In the league. , . '
He probably has a couple of good years left in the outfield, al
though he's not the speedster of yesteryear. . s
The decision of Jon Arnett to play the first five games on the
USC schedule and sit out the last five as a guilty senior in PCC will
disappoint many football fans in the state who hoped to see him in
action in Multnomah Stadium in November.
He was a cinch All-Amcrican ... in fact had been the number
one "back-of-thc-year" choice for many.
His absence likely will not disappoint the Oregon Ducks, the other
half of the Nov. 17 game.
Two years ago, as a second-string sophomore the same Arnett
went into the lineup against Oregon In Portland before a large
crowd and a national TV audience. When the afternoon was over,
he had run the hall 19 yards, passed lor .19 more, won the na
tional "back of the week" competition and knocked Oregon com
pletely out of the Rose Bowl picture.
Owens Will Re Absent This Fall
R. C. Owens won't be with College of Idaho when the Coyotes oppose
Willamette at McCulloch stadium this fall. Apparently the flashy bas
ketball center and football end will skip football-this season and join
the Buchan Bakers, the Seattc AAU basketball team, for a European
jaunt.
Owens was to return for a fifth year after, missing last season
because of injuries.
Northwest coaches would just as soon he would return as the
flock of former Icttermcn and transfers on hand at Caldwell. Back
after missing at least last season are Chuck Ruby, the fine 6-2,
Z(IO-pound guard from OrcRon City: Jim Kilgallen, same size tackle
,j the Chicago crew, and huge Hal Gcach, 6-4 and 210.
Among olhers are Dick Jlaegard,
over from the University oi laano.
Chicago fullback who spent last season ai amornia s uimpiun .i.i-.
Torrance, Calif., also is very well represented among the freshmen
again.
Sounds like Fresno
Stave won't
coming to town. .
You know . . . they de-emphasized at C. of I
couple of years ago . . .
JOE PALOOKA
OTH
TEAMS ABE
6C0RK.ESS
AFTER 7
INNINGS.'
BUT LEEMY
HAS RST1REP
21 WEN W
CflDE...JERRV
!S PITCHING
A PEOPECT
GAME SO
FAR.'
Report
saicm Senators.
"They bought me and they own
me, I'm very happy to say," the
big fellow said. "Wherever I play
next season ... or if I play , , ,
it will be through them."
All of which would sound as if
the Senators might have some very
good property on their 'hands.
However, we suspect that it will
have fa be a pretty good shake
with a good league to temporarily
pry Essegian loose from his grad
uate studies at UCLA which may
lead to a career in dentistry.
Whatever the Senators had to
shell out for him, they got It
back and more. Certainly they
couldn't have asked for any
more at the plate, In hustle and
determination or as an Indivi
dual. To inscribe new names on the
record book are worth a good
deal to a team. And the batting
title (we hope!) and a club
home run record are the very
best in this respect.
Essegian is at a crossroad that
'aces many bait players but, in
it's not too remnle inasmuch
yourself on anything but I don't
Rose Bowl. All-Coast linebacker
a 200-pound back who transferred
ana to auran, a lugniy raicu
be the only loaded ball club
J?S- VER. V- ". "-S-' -l I JERRT IS AMAIING.' HE S O.Nv F : '' i THE INNING'S OVER. , , , ,
" I OUT.' I PITCHING KOTHINS BUT iC vTC ' nf C HE'S COMIU& THIS J I t
V, y fA- "JUNK'ANO THEY CAN'T yfeN- e & C WAV... I CAN i 1 7
l - i'fP - 7 GET A HIT v AfSrCy SHOOT... r 12
- MJ- ( Sr?Ty ANOTHER "OUT:.. fVvfr.AS NOW (fflSSfk? T
idttfftQ-- mgxjszxx mtViW
VStfO-i-ji? '$, INNING.. N-NO... fW-fjWi ?
P -'
'Baseball
t World
Buzzing'
Griffith" Fiick
'Ready for
Action'
SAN FRANCISCO HI Curlev
iiricve. sports editor of The San
Francisco Examiner, said in an
article Wednesday the "baseball
underground is buzzing with the
report that the Washington club
oi the American League will be
shifted to California next year."
"The grapevine says that Calvin
R. Griffith, who recently spent
two weeKs in ian francisco and
Los Angeles conducting his own
personal survey, is waiting only
for the curtain to drop, on the
current campaign before making
his move," Grieve wrote.
"It is said that Commissioner
Ford Frick is familiar with Grif
fith s plans and is quietly pre
paring the ground for swift ac
tion. "Ever since the Boston Red
Sox purchased the San Francisco
franchise the rumor has gone the
rounds that it was done mostly
to give the American League a
foothold on the coast and espe
cially lo find a home for the fi
nancially troubled Washington
club ..."
Saxton Set
For Welter
Defense Go
Saxton Confident of
Beating Carmen
Basilio
SYRACUSE, N.Y. Ul Welter
weight champion .Johnny Saxton,
determined to prove his right to
wear the crown, boldly predicted
that Carmen Basilio was heading
"for a world of trouble" tonight
when they clash in a return title
bout at War Memorial Auditor
ium. The 26-year-old New Yorker
flew in from his Summit, N.J.,
camp breathing fire.
"Man, I'm like a hungry dog
guarding his bone," said the cocky
champion. -"If anyone tries to take
it from him, he'll bite his l and.
That's the' way I feel about the
title now that I've gotten it back
Man, he's in for a world of
trouble."
Basilio Grim, Anxious
Basilio, who finished up his
training on his home grounds
here, was grimmer and more
anxious than ever to whip Saxtnn,
the man who snatched the title
away from him on a controversial
decision in Chicago March 14.
"I'm going to win," he said
confidently. "I don't know if it
will be by points or a knockout
but I'm going to win. I'm out to
give it to him good. I still say I
deserved the decision in Chicago
and I'm going to prove it."
SYRACUSE, N.Y. tffl Welter
weight champion Johnny Saxton
weighed MS'i pounds and chal
lenger Carmen Basilio 146Vi at the
weigh-in Wednesday for their re
turn 15-round title fight Wednes
day night.
baxlon, 26-year-old New YorK-
cr, weighed 146X on .March 14
when he won the crown from Ba
silio in Chicago. Basilio. who hails
from neighboring Chittcnango,
weighed 146 at that time.
CanbytoPlay
North Marion
CANBY (Special) The Canby
cougars, Dcaieij o-u ny ociipjiuiiM:
their season opener, try for I
(U; tir-t ...in frMqil in an P.
p.m. game at North Marion.
The Cougars, fifth place finish
ers in the Willamette Valley league
last year, have only five lettcr
men back this year.
The biggest man on the team is
D. Hess, a 270-pound tackle with
one year experience.
The schedule:
Sept. 8 Scappoose
Sept. 14 At North Marion
Sept. 21 ... . At Sherwood
Sept. 25 .. Jamboree at Monmouth
Oct. 5 At Estacada
Sandy
0ct
At Dallas
0c(
Nov. 2 Central;
i
RASERALL
BROOKLYN The Milwaukee:
Braves extended Manager Fred
Haney's contract through 1937. i
Aloha Boys Give Mutual
Three football players from the Hawaiian
Islands, regulars on Ihc Willamette university
team and all three three-year lettcrmen, help each
other with the. strings on their shoulder pads be
fore practice yesterday. They arc all who are
THE SCHEDULES
North Salem
At Corvallis
At Prineville
Sweet Home
At Lebanon
Gresham
Date
September 14
September 21
September 28
October 5
October 12
October 19
October 20
October 26
November 2
Bend
At Albany
South Salem
Andy George Is ,
Hired at OCE
As Line Coach
OREGON COLLEGE OF EDU
CATION, Monmouth Andy
George, Willamette university
graduate, has been hired to as
sist in conchiiig the line for the
1956 Oregon College of Educa
tion football team.
Dr. William McArthur, head
coach, made the announcement
today. Gcotrge will help Ken
Cumiskey.with the line and Jim
Hall, a college senior, will coach
the backfield. Cumiskcy was
track coach last year.
George, a perennial Northwest
conference all-star guard, also
rated Ihc first team Little All
Northwest In 1954, the same year
he was placed on the second
team Little Ail-Coast picked by
the United Press.
Ill professional baseball with
the Salem Senators. George
pitched 15 victories in the Class
B Northwest league as a rookie.
North Marion
Has 16 Bad,
NORTH MARION HIGH SCHOOL
ISpecial) The North Marion
Huskies of the Capital Conference
arc preparing for Friday's football
opener with Canby on the North
Marion field.
The Huskies have 16 boys back
from last year's club which won
seven and lost two. but coach Jim
Hale is faced with a small turn
out and a lightweight team.
Eight of the boys have three
years' experience quarterback
Wayne I,owrie, fullback Lyle Klic
wer, halfback Jerry Nybcrg. end
Roger Moore, end Gordon Jones,
tackle Ray Lambert, guard Tom
Smith, and center Bob Rappe.
The schedule:
Sept. 14 Canby
Sept. 21 Jamboree at Stayton
' 1 "
At Silvertnn
At Cascade
"
Oct. 12 ... Gervais
Oct. 19 At Woodburn
Oct. 26 Serra
Nov. 2 At Ml. Angel
Nov. 9 Stayton
100-Lapper
Slated Here
Auto racing returns to the Holly
wood Bowl Saturday night with
the late model stock car champinn-
smP faces slated for the quartcr-
Vnlalla!m"e -Paveo iracn.
The feature race of the evening
is the loo-lap title race matching referee and Andre Drapp in the joined in Ihc punching of the Prus
Ihc best stock car pilots in the third fall. jsian, who finally retreated to his
area. I Here's how it happened. Pop-! dressing room, muttering to him-
Thc lime trials start at 7:43 wilh penheim picked up Bastien Irom sell.
the regular racing card -beginning
at 8:30.
-By Ham Fisher
left of six Ilnwailans on last year's squad. Left
to right are Windy Scquelra, halfback; Benny
Holt, quarterback; and Chuck Koanl, fullback.
(Capital Journal Photo) ,
South Salem
Albany
At Sweet Home
At Bend.
Eugene
At Lebanon
Corvallis
North Salem
WiUaminaWill
Host Stayton
WILLAMINA -(Special) The
Willamina Bulldogs will be looking
for their second straight win of
the young football season here Fri
day night when they tangle with
Stayton.
The Bulldogs scored a 27-6 win
over Taft in their opener last week
and look like they could be one
of the teams to beat In the Ya
wama league.
Coach Tom Cowan has ten let
tcrmen back from the 1955 team
which won five and lost- four.
The lettcrmen are halfbacks
Marion Pond and Doug Littlejohn.
quarterback Bob Fowler, ends Jim
Heed and Jerry I'ontl, lacKles
Jerry Spencer and George Pond,
guards Marv Trohcr and Don
Wright, and center Steve Yoasl.
The schedule:
Sept. 7 .- At Tail
Sept. 14 Slaylon
Sept. 21 At Central
Sept. 20 Banks
Oct. 5 Salem Academy
Oct. 19 At Yamhill
Oct. 26 Dayton
Nov. 2 At Sherwood
( ) At Sheridan
SBC Changes
To Evenings
The Salem Breakfast club, alter
meeting for years on Monday
morning, will switch to once
monthly night meetings this year.
The move, to make it possible
for more to attend Ihc meetings,
will include 7 p.m. meetings each
month at the Senator hotel. '
The first meeting has been set
for Sept. 19 wilh Harry Glickman,
president of Oregon Sports Attrac
tions, and Bert Rose, publicity
chief for the Los Angeles Rams,
the speakers.
For Ihc same meeting the
coaches of North and South Salem
high, Scrra. Snlem Academy, and
the two junior highs will be guests
ol the SRC.
Poppenhcim's Rough Tactics
Bring 4No Contest' Decision
Kurt Von Poppcnheim was too! This brought help from the
.... .nrnrnn iUn Dnnarnntlif Hirln'l tOP
mean for his own gooa at tne
Salem Armory last night, as his
match wilh Red Bastien was de
clarcd "no contest by referee
Krenrhv I.aChannelle.
Poppcnheim, the loud Prussian,
brought it on himself when he
got too nastv and wound up fight-;
ing three in the ring Bastien, Ihc
behind and set him up on a corner j
post. When Rastien hooked his
leei under ine ropis in uriiut: mm-
self, Poppcnheim pulled him over
backwards, then stepped on his
face. i
League Season Is Here!
We have team spots available for men's, women's and mixed
teams. Also openings for two 8 10 or 12 team leagues at
choice hours on Mondays and Thursdays.
CAPITOL BOWLING LANES
468 Ferry St. -
Support
Salem Elevens
Face Rugged
Practice Drills
Saxons Set Bulldogs
Here; Vikings
' At Cot'vullis
North and South Salem high
teams drill hard again this after
noon as the two teams near their
first .district football games Friday
nignt. -
South Salem faces the real
'toughic" of the two games as
the Saxons are faced with a game
with district-favorite Albany on the
south Salem field.
At Corvallis, the Vikings will
tangle with tho Corvallis Spartans.
representatives of this district In
the state playoffs last year.
Saxons Lack Experience
Viking head coach Mel Fox ap
parently has his team at top
strength with but one player on
the sidelines with an Iniurv. tackle
Dick West. Fox made his North
Salem coaching debut last Friday
wilh a 26-13 tvin over Franklin at
Portland.
Corvallis lacks Icttermcn and
experience but always manages to
come up with a good club. The
Spartans have always been trouble
for Salem football teams. Cor
vallis lost ils opener 20-0 to Eu
gene. The toughest chore falls on the
Saxons as llicy are faced with a
team which is probably one of
the finest elevens in the state this
year.
The Bulldogs rolled over Central
Catholic 39-7 last week wilh Gary
Grill and John Wilson carrying
much of Ihc scoring load. At the
same lime the Saxons were losing
19 0 to Beavcrlon.
Two South Salem players are
hurl, halfback Ted Foxley and end
Claude Layton, but Steve Bcrglund,
lelterman end who injured his
fingers in an accident this sum
mer, may be ready to play.
Gauer Gets Position
HERSHEY, Pa. (UP) Charley
Gauer, an assistant to former
Philadelphia Eagles Coach Joe
Trimble last year, has been
named to Ihc Eagles coaching
staff for the forthcoming National
Football League season. Gauer, 41,
played collegiate ball at Colgate
and spent three years in the NFL
as a player with the Eagles.
' "'" -pf"" ; r." .
the torture as
he tried to free
Bastion's logs, so into the ring
iumDCd Andre Drapp. a French-
man Irom a prelim match. He
alternate v s ugged Poppcnheim
and worked on Bastion's entangled
feel.
LaChappcllc then signalled for
the bell lo end the mayhem and
I he seminnat saw ueniieman
Ed Francis make his debut with
a miiiikiii ihii win uvi-i iu-kki .im.'.
The special event ended in a vic-
tnry (or Andre Drapp over Tony
Bourne.
Phone 3-357S
Indian Standout Suffers
Knee Injury in Practice
Ducks' Osborne
Faces Knee
Si
uirfirerv
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Stanford suffered Its first costly
injury Tuesday, as West Coast
college teams eased up on foot
ball practice. .
Guard Don Manoukian ot Reno,
a standout last season, wrenched
a knee. Coach Chuck Taylor said
the 220-pound lineman will be out
tor two weeks.
Taylor scheduled a scrimmage
Wednesday in preparation for
Stanford's Sept. 22 opener against
Washington State at Spokane.
At Los Angeles, tho UCLA Bru
ins reduced practice to .one work
out because of minor injuries and
registration Jot classes. Coach
Red Sanders said first ' stringers
Jerry Tenner and Oscar Harris
and sophomores Dennis Dressel
and Clint Whitfield looked sharp
in a defense scrimmage.
Best Morale', of Ycnr 1
Washington worked out on a
soggy field at Seattle. Coach Dar
rell Royal said the players ex
hibited the best "effort and mo
rale", ot the year. Royal tried out
junior . end Jim Dougherty of
Klnmaih Falls, Ore., " as a pas
sible substitute for injured center
Marv Bergmarin and said he was
pleased with Dougherty's per
formance. Bergmann is expected
to be out two weeks with a knee
injury.
At Berkeley. California's Coach
Lynn (Pappy) Waldorf worl-od
out sophomore tackles Don Pihl
Charlie. Johnson in his quest
for a new center. Waldorf said
he is considering a shift in the
Bear line because of the scholas
tic ineligibility ot 210-pound soph
omore center Frank Doretll.
Beaver Sophs Noted
Sophomores also got most of the
attention at Corvallis. Three sec
ond-year players broke into the
fiisl-string Oregon Stale
lineup
ar.fi may be starters in the Beav
ers' opener against Missouri. Sept.
22. The three are tackle Ted
Bates of Los Angeles, guard Jim
Brackins of Rcdlands, Calif., and
fullback Nub Bcamer of Rose-
burg, Ore. i -
At Pullman, Coach, Jim Suther
land indicated ' his Washington
State squad may tr to outdo
Stanford's famed quarterback Jon
Brodie in tho opener with the In
dians. Sutherland has concen
trated on passing, Brodic's chief
mm
' PI :"' lis fertEf'
i SIS r -
weapon, and with notable success.
The passing of junior Bunny Ald
rich and sophomore Bob Newman
has highlighted almost every
Cougar scrimmage.
Ducks. Stress Defense
At Eugene, Oregon concentrated
on pass defense in preparation for
Salem Contributes
7 Gridders to OCE
MeArlhur Greets
51 Prospects,
13 Lettermen
OREGON COLLEGE OF EDU
CATION, Monmouth (Special)
Oregon Collego of Education
opened football drills here Mon
day with 51 candidates on hand
(or the 1956 season.
Conch Bill McArthur, who re
ceived' his doctor's degree j last
spring at Oregon State, has only
1(1 practice days to get his Wolf
pack ready for the season's open
ing game against Lower Colum
bia College at Longvicw on Sep
tember 22. . . ,
Of the 51 turnouts for the
squad, only 13 are lettcrmen.-Six
of these were regulars last sea
son and the other seven saw con
siderable action. McArthur will
undoubtedly build his squad
around these returnees.
Six Lettermen In Backfield
Six of the returning lettcrmen
are backs. This list includes half
backs George McGrccr, Don
Lumgair, Larry Buss and Wy-
man Gcrnhart, fullback F.rvin
Garrison and quarterback Harry
Santee. ,
: Linemen returning are ends
Gleason Eakin and Murvel Stone,
tackles Barry Adams and Wayne
Osborn, guard Jim Atkins and
centers Pat McManus and Lenny
Brcucr. Two other letterman
linemen may return to the fold
before the week is out. , ,
McArthur probably wilt field a
more "wide open" type of of
fensive ball club this year than
he has In the past. He indicated
that tho Wolves will adopt
split-T offense patterned after
the Los Angeles Rams' offense to
go with McArthur's normal tight
T operation. '
McArthur spent considerable
time in the Rams' training camp
Special
... choice
Tailored -
suits
mm -J -
Reg. 87.50
luxury imports
save up to 35
Reg. 79.50
fine domestics
save up to 35
the Sept. 22 opener against Colo
rado at Boulder. Senior letterman
Chuck Osborne of Turlcck, Calif.,
a halfback candidate, appeared
headed for a knee cartilage op
eration which could sideline him
for the season. , He injured the
knee in practice. ' ' ;
this summer, boning up on the
split-T offense. . -.-'
The genial McArthur summed
up his club's prospects for the
year after Monday's two work
outs: Needs Linemen
"We need help in the line an3
we need to find a quarterback
who can handle the. split-T of
fense. If we can come up wifh
four or five good linemen out of
our freshman crop and if Harry
Santee can handle the quarter
back for us, we could do all
right."
Salem is well represented on
the Wolfpack squad this season.
Line candidates Owen Stockard,
Wayne Osborn, Ray Comstock,
Gary Elstun and Charles Winger
all hail from Salem, as do backs
Santee and Joel Blaco. ; . ' .
OCE Rights
GotoKSLM
OREGON COLLEGE OF EDU
CATION, Monmouth Dr. Rov E.
Lieuallen. president ot Oroeon Col.
lege of Education, announced here
tins week that OCE had granted
exclusive broadcasting rights for
an woupacK lootball games for
the 1956 season to radio station
KSLM of Salem. t ....
Sieve Brody, veteran sportscast
er for the Salem station, will han
dle the play-by-play description
ol OCE home games. Games awav
win De picuca up from originating
stations lor live presentation in
this area. - -,
The first broadcast will be o! the
OCE-Lowep Columbia Junior Col
lege title at Longview September
22. me broadcast will be heard
immediately following the Notre
Dame-bouthern Methodist game.
TRACK
LONDON Russia's-Vladimir
Kuts bettered the world's record
for the 10,000 meter run with a
clocking of 28.30.4
Savings
fabrics for
to - Measure
6 00
5800
Yes . . . here's the pick of the crop
from the suit fabric world . . . your ,
choice of imported flannels, herringbone
and glen plaids . . . also rich domestic
wool worsteds, twists and many more
. . . individually tailored for the right
impression . . . anywhere you go , . .
the savings is big ... at Sears.
JusJ Say "Charge
It" on Sears
Revolving Charge
Phone 3-9191
550 N. Capitol
t
i !
i i
H
n joai, money 6zc"