Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 08, 1938, Page 2, Image 2

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    PA'GE TWO
MTCDFORD MATT, TRFBUNE, M"ET)F(TRn. OKEOON. MONDAY. AUGUST 8. 1938.
Sockeye Promises Belcastro Warm Welcome in Medford Return
PAIR WILL MEET
AL
Mad Italian Comes to Town
After Year's Absence
Kenaston, Smolinski to
Grapple In Middle Event
Pete Returns
With Sockeye Jack McDonald form
ing the one-man welcoming com
mittee and an expected capacity
crowd In attendance, Pete Belcaatro,
Weed's Mad Italian, makes hla re
turn to southern Oregon grappling
circlet after a year's absence tonight
at the open-air high school arena.
' The pair clash In the main event,
echeduled for one hour or the best
two out of three falls.
Clashing In the middle attraction,
to be staged under the Australian
system of six 10-mlnute rounds or
the best two out of three falls, will
be Gold Hill's Sgt. Bob Kenaston
and Polish Palooka Joe Smolinski.
Flash Kelly of San Francisco and
Benny Wilson of Texas open the
program In another Australian sys
tem squabble.
Promoter Mack Lltlard said today
that advance reserved seat ticket
sales were the best of the year, and
that a crowd of 2000 or more would
probably be on band to greet Bel
caatro upon his return from the
east, middle west and south.
Belcastro, one of the moat color?
lul grapplera to ever appear In Med
tord, will return to display a brand
new "mystery" maneuver, one that
has brought him a sensational string
of victories In many of the large
wrestling centers of the country. He
has steadfastly refused to reveal to
Promoter Mack Llllard or anyone
else Just what manner of hold It Is.
stating that he would bring It Into
play tonight as a surprise for Mc
Donald.
On the other hand, Sockeye haa
been not In the least secretive re
garding bis plans of attack. The un
hurtable ex-Seattle logger means to
so In there and blast with both
hands until Belcastro drops.
Although the top msln event Is
the big drawing card on the pro-
mum, considerable enthusiasm has
been displayed by local fans regard
ing the Kenaston-Bmoltnskl brawl,
expected to develop Into nothing
ahort of plain and fancy legalised
mayhem. Smolinski, an eye-gouger
and halr-puller of the first water,
elalma he will dissect Kenaston and
toes the pieces to the balcony cub
tomers, while the Oold Hlller says
he will do his best to break the
Palook'a bsck with the Oold Hill
crab.
The opening encounter between
Kelly and Wilson will be a clean
nd scientific affair, as both are past
masters of every legitimate trick lr.
the game.
CRATERS SUFFER
Dynamite Pete Belcastro, who re
turn to the local grappling ring to
night after a year's absence to face
Sorkcye Jack McDonald, In shown
above wearing the belt emblematic
of the Pacific Coast Junlor-heavy-wctght
championship. Pete and Jack
clash In the mnln event at the high
school stadium tonight.
CRESCENT VISIT
Coast Dust Storm, Koll's
Pitching and Own Boots
Bring Downfall" League
Lead In Three-Way Tie
Oreemsn, If
0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals .....34 3 7 24 a
Crescent City
AB R H PO A
Miller, lb .
Matson. 3b .
8pann, If ....
Reynolds, rf
Roll, p
Deo, 3b
E
By the Associated Press
Only one team remained to be
picked today for the four-state reg
ional American Legion Junior base
ball tournament, starting next Sat
urday at Silver ton, Ore.
State representative already chosen
re: Washington, Shelton; Oregon,
Few (office Pharmacy of Portland, and
Montana. Missoula.
In the Idaho tournament the Bur
ley team took a one game lead yes
terday by defeating Parma 8 to 0 In
Burley, The teams meet again today
and If Parma wlna the deciding game
will be played tomorrow.
The Portland club won the Oregon
crown yesterday by defeating Wood
burn In the final contest 4 to 0 in
Wood burn.
T TITLES
SEATTLE GUNNER
HARRISON HOT SPRINOS, B. 0.,
Aug. t.1eyDr. B. J. Vet of Seat
tle with a score of 98 In the 10-yard
event, and H. E. Bush, Vancouver, B.
C with a score of 40 In tho 80-han-dlcap
event won Hie final competi
tions In the Pacific Indian trapshoot
here Saturday.
Seth Miller. Portland, shired runner-up
honors In the 100 Is-yard
event, with Joe McKnlght. Olympla
Xach had 87.
M. O. Henkel, Portland, broke 47
In the 60-handlcap ehoot to tie for
ttilrd place. I
Other scores In the two events ,
C. W. Lemery, Medford, Ore.. 81 and '
3; T. C. Daniels, Medford, Be and i
7; O. O. McNelly. Coqullle. Ore., 93 j
and 39; Oeorge Porter, Medford, 89
nd 44; E. R. Durno, Medford, ami
43.
By OAVI.E TALBOT
NEW YORK, Aug. 8. (fl Lou Am
bers, the lightweight champion, 1
due to step up and get his Wednes
day night at the Polo grounds, and
after that Is done the negro race wilt
:avo all the Important boxing titles
sewed up. excepting the middle
weight.
The amazing Henry Armstrong.
providing he plasters Ambers as he
is favored to do by odds of 13 to 8.
will hold the featherweight, light
weight and welterweight tagos. a, col
lection without parallel in boxing
History, it Is doubtful boxing has
seen the little negros equsl, though
the old timers still Insist that Joe
Gans would have taken him.
Joe Louis, of Armstrong's approx
imate shade, holda the most impor
tant and lucrative crown of them all.
the heavywelgnt. John Henry Lewis,
also of color, controls or does not
control the light heavyweight situa
tion, depending upon whather you
have been listening to the New York
athletic commission. Thoss sultry sa
lons have written jcJin Henry off the
books.
At sny rate, and always providing
that Armstrong catches up with the
springs Ambers within IS rounds.
there will come near being a solid
negro front on the flstlo rampants.
'IE WINS, 13-3,
OVER ASHLAND GUESTS
Olendale defeated Ashland at Glen
dale yeaterday afternoon. 13 to 3.
in a Southern Oregon league base
ball game, landing on pitchers Krln
ock and Griggs for 13 safeties, while
Glen Elliott held the Llthlans in
check with eight scattered hits.
Belcher. Glendale second baseman,
suffered a broken nose when he
was struck in the face by one of
Griggs" pitches.
Score: r. h. R.
Glendale 13 13 a
Ashland 3 8 8
Elliott and Ooff:
and Simpson.
Krinork. Griggs
GUARANTEED PERMANKNTS
S3. 75 aft oo S7.&0 St 0 00
Ethelwyna Beauty Salon.
Lefty Mike Koll, a bunch of enemy
hitters who hud no respect whatso
ever for Crater hurling and a good
old-fashioned Crescent City dust
storm all combined to raise havoc
with Medford'a Craters yesterday, and
after the locals got through adding
their bit to the Crescent City cause
by committing eight physical errors
and an untold number of mental
blunders, the score was 10 to 2.
While Medford waa taking Ha worst
beating In two years, Grants Pass
nosed Yroko, 8 to 7, throwing the
Southern Oregon league pennant race
Into a three-way tie for first place.
The Craters, Crescent City and
Grants Pass are now neck and neck.
each with four wins and one loss.
Koll In Command
Koll, Crescent City's southpaw
pitching star, hod most of the Craters
breaking their backs on his curve ball
all afternoon. He whiffed 11 of them
Including McLean three times and
Bob Smith twice, and allowed only
seven scattered safeties. Billy Calvert
rapped a homer and two singles. Hof
fard poled two singles and Rlck?rt
and Lewis hit singles. That was the
extent of Crater damage to Koll, who
turned In one of his finest exhibitions.
Big Lowell Brown, Med ford's start
ing pitcher, was blasted from the
mound In the third frame, when the
Merchants tallied six times, and all
In all was pounded for nine runs and
eight hits in hla 3 2-3 Innings of toll.
Bill Rathke took over with two away
In the third and retired the side
without another run. He finished
the game for the Craters, being i
nicked for seven runs and nine hits I
in fi 1-3 innings.
Dust Disconcerting
A stiff breeze off the ocean whip
ped up whirlpools of dust time and
again, forcing momentary pauses In
the game and making fly balls to the
outfield cut crazy capers. The Cra
ters came apart defensively, booting
grounders, mis-Judging files and per
forming like a bunch of grade school
kids, In general. Even Paul Hoffnrd,
oenterfl elder, dropped a fly right In
his hands, erring for the first time
this season.
Calvert's homer to centerfleld In
the third Inning was the first Med
ford run. Singles by Lewis and Hof-
fard In the fourth and Whlte'a fly to
rlghtfield, with Lewis tallying after
the catch, wound up the Craters run-
making for the day.
Crescent City's first run came In
the opening Inning on singles by
Matson and Spann and errors Calvert
and Lewis, and from then on It was
parade of runners crossing the
plate. Miller. II ret base man. belted
two home runs and three singles In
six trips to the plate to lead the 17-
hit attack, and Spinn hammered i
homer, Matson and Koll hit triples
ano rerm got a double
Third Inning Terrible
Crescent City sounded the death
knell for Brown in the third when
Spann, first up, drove a homer to
center, Reynolds walked, Pramsted sin
gled. Loffer got hit by a pitch. Perm
singled and Miller whammed his first
circuit clout. Rathke took over at
this point, and after Matson tripled.
Spann popped to Rlckert to end the
nnlng.
Crescent City tallied again In the
filth on Miller's second homer, cot
another in the sixth when Koll sin
gled Spann across, and four more in
the seventh on singles by Miller and
Reynolds, a hit-batsmnn. Koll's triple
and an error by Brown In Icftfield on
Deo's htgh fly. Final run scored In
the eighth on singles by Perm and
Milter and Matson's fly to right.
uox score:
Medford (2)
AB R H PO A
Framsted, cf
Loffer, ss ......
Ferm, c
a ii
Totals 45 18 17 27 12 2
Runs by Innings:
Medford - 001 100 000 2
Croscent City 126 011 4!x 16
Summary: Two-base hits. Perm.
Three-bass hits. Matson, Koll. Home
runs. Miller (2), Spann. Calvert.
Stolen bases, Spann, Framsted. Dou
ble play, Loffer to Matson to Miller.
Hit by pitcher, White by Koll, Loffer
by Brown, Spann by Rathke. Eight
hits 0 runs off Brown In 2 2-3 ta
nnings, 7 runs. 0 hits off Rathke In I
0 1-3 Innings. Struck out, by Brown
2. Rathke 3, Koll 11. Bases on balls,
off Brown 1. Losing pitcher, Brown.
Umpires, Miles and Ross. Time of
gamo 2 hours, 24 minutes.
Deposed Cochrane Planning
Vacation on Wyoming Ranch
HAT Selling price to retailers: al
falfa No. 1, 816 ton; oat-vetch, 814
ton; clover 810 11 ton; timothy,
valley 818 ton, Portland.
DETROIT, Aug. 8. (AP) Mickey
Cochrane, doposed manager of the
Detroit Tigers and a great catcher
until he suffered a triple fracture
of the skull in 1937, kept his chin
up as usual today and prepared to
leave with his family tomorrow for
a vacation on a Wyoming ranch.
"After that I'm coming back to
take another crack at big league
baseball," he said.
At the Tiger clubhouse In Brlggs
stadium yesterday, a few hours after
his discharge was announced, Coch
rane said goodbye to members of
the team and Coach Del Baker, who
succeeded him as manager.
"Kind of sudden, wasn't It?" Coch
rane observed with a grin.
He did not wait to watch the
game In which Detroit defeated the
Boston Red Sox, 7 to 3. The Tigers
lost the first two games of the series.
With Detroit 17 games behind
the league-leading New York Yankees
and In the second division, Coch
rane's release was announced Satur
day night by Walter O. Brlggs, Sr..
owner of the club. His salary, said
to be 845,000 a year, Is to be paid
until the end of tho current season.
Portland Wheat
HOW THFV
Los Angeles
Sacramento
San Diego
San Francisco
Seattle
Portland ... 61
Hollywood . 60
Oakland - - 47
Coast League
W. L. PC.
77 65 583
76 56 .576
70 62 .530
70 03 .625
68 04 .615
71 .402
72 .455
86 .353
Xntlonal l.eusue.
W.
Pittsburgh 61
New York 56
Cincinnati . 54
Chicago .. 64
Boston - 45
Brooklyn ..... 46
St. Louis 42
Philadelphia . 30
American League
W.
New York 62
Cleveland -. - 55
Boston . 64
Washington
Detroit
Chicago
Philadelphia
St. Louis
61
48
.... 39
.... 34
. 31
PC.
.635
.568
.551
.551
.474
.469
.433
.316
PC.
.667
.611
.587
510
.485
.443
.370
.330
Livestock
Scores Yesterday
Portland
PORTLAND. Ore.. Aug. 8. (AP
USDA) Hogs 2400, Including 458
direct; market very uneven early
sales 15 to mostly 25 below late
last week; late market at stand
still; good-choice 165-215 lb. drive
ins early, 80.00-10; carload lots up
99.35, with 1 load at 89-40 and 1
load at 9.46; 225-70 lb. drlveins.
$8.50-60; few lots up 88.85: light
lights, 88.50-60; packing sows. 86.50
3 7.25; few good 123 lb. feeder pigs.
87.75; choice light weights quotable
to 88.00.
CATTLE 2000. Including 62 through
and direct; calves 200 Including 60
direct; market uneven; steers mostly
25-35c higher; some sales 60c up;
medium-good she stock 25-60c or
more higher; low cutter and cutter
cows steady to 26c higher; bulls
about steady; vealers steady to 50c
higher; bulk grass fat steers, 87.75
8.25; few loads, 88.50-75; common,
85.75 fir 7.00; common -medium heif
ers, 85.507.25; low cutter and cut
ter cows, 83.25 at 4.00; common-medium,
84.255.00; good beef, 85.50
6.25; bulls, 856; . good-choice
vealers, 88.00-50.
SHEEP 3350, Including 1231 through
and direct; spring lambs active,
steady-strong; slaughter ewes slow,
25c and more lower; good trucked
In spring lambs mostly 83.25-50; few
lots. 86.60-75; around 1 car eastern
Oregons, 97.00: load Washington
lambs, 87.25; common-medium, 85
6; medium-good slaughter ewes, 92q
3; top, 93.25.
as yet unsold; sheep about steady:
native slaughter ewes $3.25 a .50.
Portland Produce
PORTLAND. Aug. 8. (P) Wheat :
Open High Low Close
Sept. .601,4 -0Va 58'i M
Dec .621, .62 V4 .61 -61
Cash grain:
Oats, No. 2. 38-lb. white 23.50;
No. 2. 38-lb. gray 23 50.
Barley. No. 2. 45-lb. B. W. 20.
Corn. No. 2. E. Y. shipment. 2755.
Cosh wheat bid:
Soft white 69c; western white 59c;
western red 66c.
Hard red winter, ordinary 56c: 11
percent 57c; 12 percent, 61c; 13 per
cent 64c; 14 percent 66c.
Hard white. Baart ordinary 69c;
11 percent 69c; 12 percent 60c; 13
percent 62c; 14 percent 65c.
Car receipts: wheat 220; barley 8;
flour 8; corn 7.
Coast.
San Diego 60, Sacramento 6-9.
Oall'.and 7-7, Hollywood 4-1.
San Francisco 6-2, L03 Angeles 3-6.
Seattlo 7-6. Portland 5-1.
Calvert. 3b
Rlckert, 2b
Lewis, ss ....
McLean, o ..
Hoffsrd. cf
White, rf ...
Smith, lb
Boyle. If
Rathke, p
Brown, p-lf .
4 13 2 0
4 0 12 2
4 1112
4 0 0 7 0
i 4 0 2 i 0
.1 n o q n
4 0 0 S 1
10 0 10
8 0 0 0 0
S 0 0 0 1
National
Pittsburgh 5-13. New York 1-3.
Chicago 7-0. Boston 4-5.
Philadelphia 6-1. St. Louis 3-5.
Brooklyn 11-6, Cincinnati 10-3.
American
New York 7, Cleveland 0.
Detroit 7, Boston 3.
St. Louis 5-6, Philadelphia 3-8.
Chicago 14-5, Washington 6-12.
FIVE PLAY OFF IS
Bob Ruht won fifth place In the
H. Chandler Egan Memorial self tour
nament when he shot a net 64 over
the week-end as five golfers, tied
for fifth place at the conclusion of
the tourney July 31, played IP holes
to determine fifth, sixth seventh.
eighth and ninth places. All had
ended the 72-hole medal Handicap
affair with scores of 273.
Ben Trowbridge gained sixth place,
Ivan Harrington seventh, Lloyd Nass
eighth and George Hnrrington ninth.
Ruhl received three golf balls as a
prlre, while the others were awarded
two balls.
South ban Fronclsco
SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 8
(AP-USDA) Hogs 800. Most bids
: around 20g lower than Friday or 10c
below Saturday; around 170-225 lb.
butchera bid 89 30, held higher.
CATTLE 650. Indications around
steady to strong on steers; few good
steers held above 88,25; medium
grades eligible around 98.00 down;
good young cows salable up to 95.75;
low cutters and cutters, 93,25 g 4.35;
few fat dairy type cows, 84.40; bulls
steady, mostly 95 6; calves 175;
active, fully steady; 05 head good
range vealers. 89.50; medium to
good slaughter calves 97.00 ijr 8.50.
SHEEP 32001 lambs about steady
with late last week, or 25c lower
than last jveek's high time; live
decks good to choice 86-87 northern
California wooled lambs, 87.73; choice
north coast shorn lambs held around
87.50; few good kinds, 87.25; other
classes steady; few medium yearlings.
94.75; nbout three decks common to
medium shorn slaughter ewes, (1.50
$2.50; choice g noted to 83.50.
Portland Thief
Takes Fine Lawn
PORTLAND. Aug. 8. 'Ernest
Mar bolt, Portland, woke up Sunday
morning to find the ne!ghboi:oo,l
lawn thief had been busy .taln.
About a third of the Marbott iswn
was missing, Mlced and rolled up and
carted away. This was the third pil
fering Job of Mr. Marbott s lawn and
he culled the police.
Marbott. a commercial grass grower,
sold he wondered If the thief knew
ti e species waa called "lazy man's"
grass.
7 SAILBOATS SWAMPED
IN COOS BAY REGATTA
NORTH BEND. Aug. 8 lP A 40
Bills wind almost blew tl:e Cooa Bay
Yacht club's regatta off the ocean
Sunday. Seven sailboats swamped at
the start of one race and only the
19-toot craft of Oeorge SeLuider fin
ished, fcfotorboat racea were called
off.
WHEN YOU REPLACE DEMAND
A.
WELDING
Arc & Acetylene
Portable Welding
Outfits
BEB
SPRINGS
Repaired and
Rebuilt
WINDOW OLASS We sell wlndox
(lass and will replace your broken
windows reasonably. Trowbridge Cab
Jnet Works.
FOR ALL CARS AND TRUCKS
GENERAL BLACKS MITISIHG
BERGMAN'S SHOP
118 South Bartlett
Phone 113
Chicago
CHICAGO, Aug. 8. (AP-USDA)
HOOS: 15,000; uneven; steady to 15c
lower; top $9.60; good llht packing
sows $7.25 ft .75; butcher kinds to 88:
medium weights and heavies 16.25
g 7.15.
CATTLE 1 1 ,000; calves 1.500; fed
steers, top S13.7S: several loads I2
A.35; best yearlings early Sll.ti5: and
mixed yearlings S11.35; heifer weak
to 25c lower: fat cows steady: most
cutters Me5; bulls 10erl5c lower:
practical top weighty sausage bullB
(6.50: vealers, bulk 9 50, 10.25: a
tew S10.50.
SHEEP 8,000; spring lambs active;
natives to packers $8.25.60; cne load
good to choice Idnhos (8.60 to pack
ers straight; Oregons and yearlings
PORTLAND, Aug. 8. (API BUT
TER: Prints. A grade, 28c lb. In
parchment - wrappers, 20c In cartons;
B grade 27c In parchment wrappers,
28c lb. In cartons.
BUTTERPAT Portland delivery,
buying price: A grade 26a26.ic lb.
In country stations; A grade 24'c lb.;
B grade, l'fcc less; C grad.i 6c lb.
less.
EGGS Buying prices by whole
salers: specials 25io doz.; extras, 23c
doz.; standards 22c doz.; extra med
iums, 21c doz.: undergrades, 15c doz.
CHEESE Oregon triplets, 13V2c:
Oregon loaf, 14c. Brokers will. pay !c
below quotations.
COUNTRY MEATS Selling price to
retailers: Country-killed hogs, best
butcher under 160 lbs. H'.;)12'jc
lb.; vealers 13ftl3c lb.; light and
thin. 9 g 12c lb.; heavy 910c lb.;
bulls 10c lb.: canner cows 7c; cutter
cows 78c lb.; spring lambs 12 13 13c
lb.; old lambs Ifi Sc lb.; ewes 4a 7c lb.
LIVE POULTRY Buying prices:
Leghorn broilers, to 1 lbs., 15 g
16c lb.; 2i lbs., 1616c lb.; colored
springs, 2 to 3 lbs., 1618c lb.;
over 32 lbs., 18V310c lb.: Leghorn
hens, over 34 lbs.. 18',il9c lb.;
Leghorn hens, over 3 lbs, 143 15c
lb.; under 3i lbs., 1414!':c lb.; col
ored hens, 5 lbs., 18(3 18'aC lb.; over
5 lbs.. 18518!ic lb.; No. 2 grade.
5c lb.- Jess.
TURKEYS Selling price: dressed
new crop hens, 28c; toms 24 ft 25c lb.
Buying price: old hens 20c, toms
17 m 18c lb.
POTATOES Yakima Gems 1.40,
Rosa $1.25, !00 lb. bag: local $1,309
1.35. 100 lb. bag.
ONIONS California White Globe.
9165; Oregon $2; Walla Walla. 65 e
75c per 50 lb. bag.
. CANTALOUPES Yakima $1.40
1 00; The Dalles $1.50 g 1.75 crate.
WOOL Willamette valley, nominal
medium, 25c lb.: coarse and braids,
21 (3 25c lb.; eastern Oregon, 16'
26c lb.
Chicago Wheat
Far East, together with further weak
ness of major commodities, sapped
the stock market's stamina today and
leading Issues dipped fractions to
around a points at the worst.
The list got off to a slightly lower
start. Subsequent attempts at a rslly
were too feeble to attract much sup
port and the slow downward drift
continued until Just before tho close
when extreme losses were reduced In
many cases.
Transactions approximated 900,000
shares.
Today's closing prices for S3 select
ed stocks follow:
Al. Chem. Dye .180
Am. Can 10315
Am. Fgn. Pow ; 4,
A. T. it T. 142' ,
Anaconda 86"
Atch. T. S. P 37i
CHICAOO, Aug. 8. (AP) Smash
ing down to new 6-year low prices
for alt grains, corn today fell 3!
cents a bushel and wheat 2 cents.
At the close. Chicago corn futures
were 2 '4 -3 cents lower, compared
with Saturday's finish, September,
50-50',. December 48,-'4, wheat
2-2!4 down. September 62?,-, De
cember 64!4-. and oats off.
Wheat: Open High Low
Sept.
Dec .6634
March .68 '4
May .69 !i
.64
.69',
.625,
.6414
.661$
.6714
Close
,62 i
.67?,
Wall St. Report
NEW YORK, Aug. 8. UP) Renewal
of war fears In conjunction with
fresh Russo-Japanese fighting In the
Bendix Avla.
Beth. Steel
Caterpillar Tract.
Chrysler .
Coml. Solv
Curtlss-Wrlght
DuPont
Gen. Elec.
Gen. Foods .
Gen. Mot -
Int. Harvest.
I. T. & T.
... 21 1,
6914
.. 56
... 78
11 li
6i
...-132
43H
35
7Vi
61 i
... 9',i
Johns-Man ... 96'
Monty Ward 483
North Amer 21'4
Penney (J. C.) . 85
Phillips Pet 42r,
Radio 7,
Sou. Pac. , . ... 201,
Std. Brands 8',
Std. Oil Cal. 33
St. OH N. J S7V,
Trans. Amer. ... . 10V,
Union Carb ........, 85 Vt
Unit. Aircraft 3814
U. S. Steel ta
Gas Revenue Up
PORTLAND, Aug. 8. (iP) Gas rev
enues for the 12, months ended June
30 were up 1.4 percent but net In
come for the year was off $25,483 at
$194,025, Paul B. McKee, president
of the Portland Gas & Coke .com
pany, said Saturday In a quarterly
report to stockholders.
SAVE TIME
Travel while
you sleep!
3
Leave in the evening. Next
mttrning you're in Portland or
San Francisco, refreshed and
ready for work or pleasure
after a good night's sleep.
You'll save a lot of time. Trjin
fares are low. For example:
SAN FRANCISCO
Tourist Fare $9.45 $18.00
Lower Berth 1.75 3.50
In Coaches S.42 16.00
PORTLAND
lit C1M Fire 59.88 514.85
Lower Berth 2.50 5.00
In Coaches 6.59 10.65
For de ciiled info murine on
train schedule, just phone:
Southern Pacific
r. 0. MOKKI5, Ajrnt. rnonc 14
CHANGES TO PRM
W VOa SWITCH TO TRITON
Tnfi THE 100 PURB PARAtFIN BASE OIL
-j :
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fnfS
Moron
01
THE 100 "PURE
VAXATr-IN-BASZ
1000-CM TfSr MOVES TRITON CHANS OUT CARBON,
OOSTS HOMtPOWfR, INCREASES OASOUNE MI1EAOI
In I recent 102-1-car test, carbon knock, or "ping
ing" wis greatly reduced or stopped in every car
completing 3,000 miles with Triton motor oil.
Horsepower picked up in average of 5.4.
Two-thirds of the drivers reported increased gas
oline mileage.
All drivers reported improved performance.
The results are explained by pnpanesclvnt rtfin
mg. It makes Triton 100 furt parafEn-base . . .
100- lubricant. Thus Triton not only provides
the finest type of motor-protection any oil can give,
but in addition clfani cut carhtn a jou dnti.
TRY TRITON IN YOUR CARI
Get rid of costly carbon knocks and keep them
out with Triton Motor Oil. Save on carbon scrapes,
gasoline, motor-wear and oil drains.
Try Triton next time you buy oil!
PRODUCT OF UNION OIL COMPANY