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About Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946 | View Entire Issue (March 27, 1947)
Southern Oregon News Review, Thursday, March 27, 1947 Crochet Doily Motif Of ( ’ross and Crown ASEBALL owners, managers, players and writers often can be B j wrong. So can baseball fans—who CRO SS TOW N Bv Rol.mJ Coe ••«»I- ( III USE I m iss you TERRIBLY, Incram!** “ G ilbert, did you know our account is overdraw n again?*’ By Ernie Bushmiller NANCY th at sign is for the shop NEXT DOOR FR EE SAMPLES TODAY M U T T A N D JE F F L IT T L E R E G G IE JIT T E R B y B ud F ish er By M a rg arita B y A rthur P o in ter don’t like to admit It. Here is a letter from an ardent Ozark country rooter: “Why don't you fellows admit that all the great ball players, of mod- I ern time come from | the Ozark country, | where they can run and throw? I mean Arkansas, Missouri, ] Oklahoma and Tex as? I mean such j fellows as Dean, H u b b ell, P e p p e r Martin, W arn ek e and others. Also this Cardinal ball club that whipped the eastern Dodg- p. Martin ers and the eastern Red Sox last year? We have the legs and arms in this rugged coun try that the East doesn’t have.” In mingling and hanging around with the Cardinals, one of our fa vorite ball clubs, we began a slight check-up. In a vague way, we also had the idea that this fast-running, hard- throwing, hustling team was a prod uct of the cottonwood trail, the coun try where men have arms and legs and take desperate chances. But we ran across a different answer in checking with the world’s cham pions. For example—there was Enos Bradsher (“Country’’) Slaughter, a hall player as typical of Cardinal strength as any man you can find —a ball player with a great arm and a pair of fast-flying legs. “Country” Slaughter should have been a typical Ozarkian. But we discovered that Slaughter cam e from Roxboro, N. C„ and he got his start in the South Atlantic league with Columbus, Ga. Well, what about George John ("Whitey” ) Kurowski, as good a third baseman as you’ll m eet today? “Whitey” Kurowski came from Reading, Pa., playing with Ports mouth in the Middle Atlantic league, where he hit only .386. Come From Everywhere Marty Marion certainly must be a member of the cottonwood trail. But we find that Marty came from Richburg, S. C., before moving to Rochester for his baseball educa tion. Marty was with Rochester three years before they decided he could handle an infield rap. But what about Stanley Frank Mu- sial, possibly the best all-around ball player in the game? Musial reports from Donora, Pa., and almost his entire early career was along the Atlantic seaboard, until he cam e to the Cardinals six years ago. Terry Moore came up from Mem phis, Howie Pollet from New Or leans. Schoendienst worked in the East. Johnny Beazley is from Ten nessee. the city being Nashville. The Ozark landscape certainly has sent in its share of great ball play ers. More than its share. It is surprising how many fans think of these hard-running, hard- throwing, hard-fighting Cardinals as a rather rough bunch from the Ozark landscape. But this Cardinal camp is one of the quietest and most orderly I have seen. They are all well-dressed, well-behaved, rather soft-voiced and always friendly. Lon an Ozark Boy /C R O C H E T E D in e ith e r w h ite o r e c ru , th is e x q u isite doily c a n be u se d a s a dining ta b le c e n te r- p ie c e o r on a n o c c a sio n a l ta b le . I t m e a s u r e s 22 in c h e s—is c a lle d th e “ C ro ss a n d C row n” b e c a u s e of th e tin y c ro sse s in th e c e n te r d ia m o n d s h a p e d se c tio n s a n d th e h a lf cro w n s w hich fo rm th e b o rd e r ed g e. To obtain complete crocheting instruc tions for the Cross and Crown Doily (P a t tern No. 5221) send 20 cents in coin, your nam e, address and pattern num ber. Due to an unusually large dem and and cu rren t conditions, slightly m ore tim e Is required in filling orders for a few of the m ost popular pattern num bers. SEW ING CIRCLE N E E D L E W O R K 709 M ission St., San F ra n cisco , Calif. Enclose 20 cents for pattern. No________________ N am e_____________________________ Address___________________________ Tombstone Sidewalks M eshed is th e holy c ity of I r a n w h e re a ll o b je c ts w ith a n y s a c r e d sig n ific a n c e a r e re v e re d by th e in h a b ita n ts a n d th e 100,000 M oslem p ilg rim s w ho v is it it a n n u a lly . Y e t fo r a g e n e ra tio n , its sid e w a lk s h a v e b een p a v e d w ith old to m b sto n e s—fro m a re c o n v e rte d c e m e te r y —p la c e d w ith th e ir in sc rip tio n s u p w a rd . END LAXATIVE HABIT THIS EASY WAY! M illions N ow T a k e H e a lth fu l F re sh F r u it D r in k - F in d H a r s h L a x a tiv e s U n n e c e ssa ry I t’s lemon and water. Y e s-ju st th< juice of 1 Sunkist Lemon in a glass ol water-first thing on arising. Taken first thing in the morning, this wholesome drink stimulates bowel action in a natural way-assures most people of prompt, normal elimination. Why not change to this healthful habit? Lemon and water is good for you. Lemons are among the richest sources of vitamin C, which combats fatigue, helps you resist colds and infections. They also supply Bi and P. They alkalinize, aid appetite and digestion. Lemon and water has a fresh tang, too-clears the mouth, wakes you up! Try this grand wake-up drink 10 mornings. See if it doesn’t help you! Use California Sunkist Lemons. I still miss my old tobacco-chew ing pal, Lon Warneke. who could wash down a big hunk of tobacco with a bottle of beer. Lon, from ; Mt. Ida, Ark., held the all-around, tobacco-chewing championship. He has no successor on the Cardinals today. The Cardinals’ manager. Eddie Dyer, is probably best described as the exact opposite of Leo Durocher, his hottest rival, another great man ager. Dyer is a graduate of Rice institute in Texas, one of the lead- j ing institutions of learning in this country. The rumor is that he was a Phi Beta Kappa. He was also a 6 6 6 STARTS RELIEF IN football star, one of the best in Tex JUST 6 SECONDS as in his time. He is a quiet, soft- . spoken Texan, who has few argu famous, prescript ion-type j *66 • for super-speedy relief | ments with umpires or anyone else, j from cold miseries Try 668 But don’t forget that he knows his Cold Tablets, or. t 666 Liquid Cold trade. As a minor league manager I Preparation today* in the Cardinal farm system , he F Caution: Use only ae directed. kept sending along ballplayers who made good. Dyer had retired from baseball to work in the oil business with his two brothers in Houston, Tex., when Sam Breadon sent for him to fill in ^ Absolutely SURE WAY for Billy Southworth. DEPENDABLE FOR 69 YEARS! As easy going as Dyer seem s to F ilthy rats spread be, there is nothing soft about him. disease and de- STEARNS’ deadly You don’t get to be the best blocking stroy feed, crops, e le c t r ic back in Texas football if you’re on chickens, livestock. RAT& ROACH Stearns’ is sure death the soft side. Dyer has the respect to rats. U sed by U . S . and affection of his squad. PASTE Government. “My team wants to play winning 354 S $1.00 at DRUGGISTS baseball,” he told me. “I don't have to watch their hours. They love the 1 3 -4 7 game and like to win. They keep in ; W NU—13 shape. I don't want anyone around I have to watch. Just give me men like Terry Moore, Marty Marion, Stan Musial, “Country” Slaughter, “Whitey” Kurowski, “Red” Munger, Howie Pollet and a few more like M u st Be these, and I don’t have to worry. I to fee Whatever happens, I know they are I giving the team 100 per cent of all C onsistently A d v e r tis e d they have.” That seemed to be quite enough in j BUY ADVERTISED G OO DS 1946. Ask the Red Sox. COCO SUFFERERS! V IR G IL B y L en K leis KILL KATS MERCHANDISE GOOD