AGB TEN
THE NEWS AND THE HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
December 21, 1939
Ddssdds Mil .Kfiloeft. (DGuo ddo
mum
iDBDLD.
By Bill Cummingt
v LOCALS FACE TOCOH
COAST OASABA TEAMS
Klamath high easaba erw
will hav tough sledding when
tbey trarel to the coast next
, wee tor a
harnstorm
2 through the
Cooi bay re
gion. .
Forrest Klr
by, frosh coach
who comea
from Bandon
and know the
coast league'
style or bas
ketball, say
all three of the team the Peli
can will play are hard-driving,
high (coring olubs. Coquille,
the opponent for Thursday
night, December 28, ha a good
basketball crew to go along
with It topnotch football team.
Coach Dutch French will be
running up against an old
(choolmate when he take hi
Pelican onto the CoqulU
court. The coach of the coast
town 1 Spike Leslie, a frater
nity brother of French' at the
University of Oregon and a
former football star (or the
Webfoot.
Leslie use the same fast
breaking type of basketball that
French employ, giving prom
ise of a tough scramble when -the
two team get together.
North Bend and Marshfleld,
scheduled for the following Fri
day and Saturday nights, are
likewise tough aggregations,
aooordlng to Froth Coach Kirby.
- : . e
Bob Lowe, Pelican basketeer.
I rounding Into better shape
after hi football knee Injury,
and will soon see regular ac
tion, according to French. The
boy who' will bear watching,
however, on the Pelican lineup
1 Eugene Love, who 1 showing
fin (hooting ability and 1 am
bidextrous. - - -
.,..
;- Sick Shuck, diminutive .for
ward on the Merrill high school
eounty B league team, 1 the
high scorer to date In league
competition. He ha gathered
in a total of 15 points to lead
the eoorlng field. His big night
was against Henley high, when
a rang np It points.
Next on the county B league
coring list Is Harold Putnam,
lanky Keno center, who has tal
lied IS times to date. He piled
up 17 points In the Keno-Malln
game to get the highest single
game total In the county .so far
this season.
Other county high scorers are
Louis "Renn of Keno, with 18;
Korria of Henley, with 17; Tay
lor of Chiloquln, with 15. and
Taylor's teammate, Horton,
with io;
-
Out In the college casaba cir
cuits Ted Sarpola, University of
Oregon shotmaker, Is already
attracting attention for high
scoring. This Astoria star, a
senior at Oregon this year, will
probably pile up one of the
highest point totals on the coast,
and may come close to equaling
Laddie Gale's mark of last year.
Hobby Hobson, Oregon bas
ketboss, describe Sarpola as
the player with the "fast
hands," who can shoot with one
hand from any angle. He
never takes two-handed chest
shots.
LOCALS WILL
PLAY SERIES
i
WITH TOUGH
SOUTIIERIIERS
Eleven Pelican basketeers and
Coach Dwlght French will invade
the home court of the Chlco bas
ketball team tonight tor the first
of a two-game series with the Call
fornia players. The second game
will be played Friday night.
With the same lineup that
started the Yreka game last Friday
night picked to open the contest,
Coach French pronounced all his
team members In good shape ex
cept Ray Crane, who sprained an
ankle during the week In practice,
bui may be able to see action in
the second game of the series.
The starters will probably be
the following:
Forward Bill Rush.
Forward Marion Reginato.
Center Bob Erlandstra.
Guard Byron Cody.
G oArd George- Cooley.
Other making the trip will be
Crane, John Mathis, Harold Eit
trelm, . guards; Arthur Martin,
Eugene Love, forward, and Wes
ley Loreni, center. The twelfth
member of the squad, Virgil Jar-
rett, who has been competing in
the Golden Gloves boxing tourney.
wul not make the trip due to his
prolonged absence from practice
and a questionable eligibility un
til next term.
The Chlco team, coached by
Kaipn Hensley, uses a tight man'
to-man defense and a fast driving;
offense which Bhould produce a
colorful game when the two quin
tets come together. French's Peli
cans depend on speed and drive to
outrun opponents.
Officials at Chico, where Chlco
State college produces a high in
terest in basketball among fans
and players alike, are less strict
in their foul-calling than in Klam
ath Falls, according to word re
ceived from Coach Hensley. The
result should be an interesting
crap ior in nam playing Peli
can, who trounced Yreka 20-8
here last week In their first game
or tne season.
Following the Chico excursion
the Pelicans will leave on a Christ
mas tour into western Oregon for
games with several coast teams.
Th tour will start next Thursday
ana on mat night the Pelicans
will play Coquille. On Fridav and
Saturday nights the locals will olav
-norm sena ana Marshfleld to wind
np the tour.
The next home game will be
played against Ashland. Fridav.
January 5, and the following nttrht
the Pelicans will take on Grants
rass.
The Pelicans were scheduled to
leave early Thursday morning for
unico. ,
Stanford Drops
Basketball Tilt
' LTNCOT.V Vfth ra 41 mm
i wv. - . u.ry -
v UICII-UUJC
19-point half-time disadvantage
last nignt ana edged out Stanford
in a wild finish 4S-47
The Visitor ran avaw ,ftl.' -
game in tne iirst period with Don
Williams rn! Inrf tn u- 9 1 nnin,. I
led 33-14 at the half. Nebraska
railed to make a basket until the
game was 11 minutes old.
Nebraska.' Rtartlnc, a .
watched the end of the half from
the bench and reentered the game
to Bet off th xpnrins- nA- ht.i.
gave Stanford Its first defeat of
tne season.
$1.00 pint
$1.95 quart Hlf
Arallafcl. In Clarke's Sour. sfet - if I $
Son, Straight Bo.rb.ii Whif . iWW MM I '?
k.y ond Clatke'l Ry, Straight ' lWwZ At 1'A i .1
Sr. Whhli.r. Ten whliklM ff IJu 11 1 HI IE-I J I
era 4 yurt el 90 proof. JjHf jsv
Hold Everything!
imrctaa T. a twr. ore.
"A collar button in your soup, sir? Oh, goody I I've been
. looking for that all afternoon I" , .
Coast Is Breeding
Ground for Champs
By JERRY BROXDFIELD
SEA Service Sports Writer
One of the most awesome col
lections of mobile giants that any
part of the country ever sent to
the wars stamps the Pacific coast
as the most likely breeding ground
of the 1940 national collegiate
basketball champion. '
There Isn't a weak sister on the
golden slope. At least three teams
must be rated among the nation's
best in the early season estimates.
Oregon, which won the N. C. A.
A. title by beating Ohio State last
winter, is making a strong bid to
repeat, but should be pressed con
siderably by Southern California
and California.-! The latter two
are said to have the greatest teams
in their history.
Oregon lost four of last season's
regulars. Including all-America
Laddie Gale, but the Webfeet have
a wealth of material built around
John Dick, rangy all-Far Western
forward. .
Dick, who Is expected to take
over where Gale left off as offen
sive spark, stands six feet four.
He will team with Ted Sarpola, a
six-foot one-inch two-year letter-
man.
Archie Marshik, six-foot seven
inch sophomore, and Henry Ander
son, a junior with the same alti
tude, will handle the center job
very nicely. Matt Pavalunas, a
pigmy at five feet 11, Is one guard.
The other is still being contested
for by Porky Andrews and Toivo
Pilppo, six-foot sophomores, and
Vic Townsend, a six-foot junior
college transfer.
Offensively, Howard Hobson ex
pects his club to be better than
last season's.
The Lemon-Yellow, again, using
the driving, quick break, averaged
better than 60 points in three
warm-up games.
Its tall and fleet operatives roar
down the court at top speed . . .
winging long passes all over the
floor.
Southern California, runner-up
to California for the Pacific
coast conference southern division
crown, has four holdovers from
Its crack quintet of last season.
Ralph Vaughn, senior forward
from Frankfort, Ind., is the prin
cipal reason why the Trojans
should go places.
This six-foot southpaw trickster
Is being boomed as a second Hank
Lulsettl and already holds the
coast scoring mark for a single
game with 36 point against U.
C. L. A. ,
The other forward Is Jack Mor
rison, a senior who broke bis ankle
as a sophomore, but who came
back laBt winter to finish seventh
in dlVision scoring.
Dale Sears, six-foot two-Inch
center, was good enough defen
sively to make the all-dlvlsion
team as a guard, but will deploy
again in the jumping circle.
Although Troy lost Gail Good
rich by graduation, guards are no
problem with Tom McUarvin,
brilliant defensive ace and scoring
threat, back at one post, and Jack
Llppert, a lotterman a a sopho
more last trip, at the other.
California also ha four of It
five regular of last season back
In nnlform.
Pacing the attack I six-foot
five-inch Bill -Ogilvie. Everett
Dean, Stanford coach, who has
seen basketball all over the United
States, say two of this big center's
exhibitions last season rank with
the finest he has ever witnessed.
Capt. Walt Blckerton and Bill
Blggerstaff are superlative guards
who combine unusual shooting
talent with air-tight defonsive
play.
PORTLAND'S
Most Distinctive Hotel
. invitei you
rnrniir srfflM
) HnmM.ffat RftOfSS
a n-notfrroi cooe
a Sflrtbri bus
HOTEL
Dim m
OAMCl
BENSON
m covu
CSABM
rttf KM - tmUut
Sport Briefs
By FRITZ HOWELL
(Pinch-Hitting for Eddie Bricta)
pOLUMBUS, O.. Dec. 21 (JF)
w Before wrapping np the 1939
football season . . . Now how about
a belated pat on the back for
Chester (Red) Roush, a real Iron
man of the gridiron? "Red." end
and captain of little Alfred Hol-
brook college at Manchester, O.,
played every minute of 34 games
from 1936 through 1939. Roush
had never played football before
enrolling at Holbrook.
HAPFT HUNTING GROUNDS
Notre Dame's Elmer Layden.
Cornell's Carl Snavely, Navy's
"Swede" Larsen, Purdue's Mel El
ward, and Indiana's Bo McMIUln
are Just a few of the ''foreign"
coaches who have appeared this
winter as guest speakers at Ohio
high school football banquets.
Probably they are touring Just
for the fun of It, but Snavely said
at Canton:
"The finest high school football
In the country is played up here
in northeastern Ohio. And it you
can turn out one athlete In 10
years as good a Don Scott (Ohio
State quarterback trom Canton)
and end blm up to our univer
sity, I'll continue to think thl Is
a great community."
TODAY'S GUEST STAR
Elmer LflVripfl Iflflrauln T
ledo's Downtown Coaches' associa
tion, said:
"It's A TllAA.IirA tA h harm fnt
I like to string along with a win
ner , , An uowniown coacnes are
wlnitflri tnr ttiAV nlsw thai. m -
on Monday, two days after they've
been completed on the field. In
fact, I've never heard of a down
town coach losing a game."
NOVA IN HOSPITAL
WOODLAND, Calif., Dec. 21
(UP) Lou Nova, heavyweight
boxer, yesterday . entered the
Woodland Clinic hospital for ob
servation of a bladder infection
and general physical checkun. Dr.
W. T. Robblns of Davis, brother-in-law
of the fighter, was attend
ing him. Hospital attendants said
Nova's condition was not serious.
The flying lemurs, of Malaysia,
can glide 200 feet from one tree
to another.
BASIN HOOP
STARS READY
FOR CONTEST
WITH OILERS
Prepared to give the visiting
Signal Oil eontingent plenty to
worry about Saturday night at
th armory, th Klamath Basin
league All-Stars were waiting Im
patiently Thursday for the Im
pending basketball contest that
would send their team against
the touring quintet from Port
land here this weekend.
With three members of last
y a r's championship Qienger
team, Cliff McLean, Leonard VI
vette and Ted Schopf, forming
the nucleus of th local aggrega
tion, the Klamath cage squad I
expected to give the Invader a
real battle. Capable assistance
from Emll Strothelde, giant Wey
erhaeuser pivot man, Lou Alello,
fighting Molatore forward, and
two First National Bank star,
Howard Scroggln and Rusa Mai
shall, will make the Basin team
dangerous opponents for almost
any hoop squad.
Th All-Stars, playing their
first game together last Friday
against Pacific university at the
armory, performed quit well but
were outclassed by the better
drilled collegians after leading In
the scoring department practically
all the way. With a few games
the local court aces should he
molded into a smooth-functioning
unit that will give visiting basket
ball crews all th competition
they want. League officials have
lined up aeveral top ranking out-of-town
quintets that will com
here throughout the winter cam
paign. Saturday' clash should b
especially Interesting from the
spectators' standpoint because
former team mates will be play
ing opposite each other in the
Signal Oll-Klamath engagement.
McLean of the Basin team and
the Oilers' Bill Courtney were
paired at the guard positions on
Coach Howard Hobson Southern
Oregon Normal team several
year ago when the Ashland
school was turning out champion
ship cage crews. Later Chuck
Patterson, big negro center,
tenmed with these two boys and
t ither tbey transferred to Uni
versity of Oregon a few seasons
barjc to play as regulars on the
Eugene five.
Captain Bill Courtney, leader
of the visitors, Is rated one of
the best defensive players In the
state today, even after several
years as a top-flight Independent
ca:aba star. Although two Inches
under the six foot mark, Courtv
ney Is a valuable backboard man.
retrieving tbe ball with much
the same adeptness that McLean
is known to do. He collects bis
share of the points during a con
test, specializing in one-handed
southpaw push shots.
Chief scorer to date for the
Oilers is Jay Holllngsworth, for
mer basketball star from Oregon
State. He has averaged 13 points
for the 12 contests the Signal
team has played thus far this
winter. Art .Mcrryman and Roy
Pflugrad. two more ex-Oregon
Staters, are considered the two
best ball handlers on the Port
land team and both are con
sistent scorers as well.
Princeton Boy
Given Spokane
Club's Trophy
LOS ANGELES, Dec. 21 (ff)
The Round Table club of Spo
kane, has named Don Herring,
plucky Princeton university fool-
ball player, as Its "outstanding
sportsman of the year."
Marvin (Bud) Ward of
Spokane, national . amateur golf
king and club secretary an
nounced tbe selection of Herring
nere. ine husky tackle under
went a leg amputation following
a football Injury this fall.
Nationally known sports au
thorities participated In th poll
which ' named Herring for the
honor and cited him as having
contributed most to amateur
athletics in 1939.
Ward Is spending th winter
In Southern California.
Herring will be honored at the
annual dinner of the Washington,
D. C, touchdown club, and will
be presented there with the
Round Table trophy. Vic Presi
dent Garner is scheduled to make
the presentation.
The Spokane organization la
one which annually, in lighter
vein, conduct a nationwide
"moaning contest" for college
coaches. It also sponsors a golf
tournament in which links cele
brities try to pcrf'or::i -
firecrackers ' are set off on th
sidelines.
At
THE GIFT HE'D
CHOOSE FOR HIMSELF
It's trientifcally designed to cool smoke between puff, . .
condenses and traps sll irritating oils, tsr and vapors , , .
a cooler, smctcr, more fragrant amok.
THE HUSG!? PIPE
gni.ff).IM .aB
Onm at 4 tkttt
witt Mttly "fil"
tnnrr oi imoking
910.00 to 17.50
Klamath Billiard
Pitchers Need Savvy
Rather Than Control
Bowling
Ry GKOllGK KIltKSKY
United Pro Staff l?ormiKiiident
NKW YORK. Deo. II U.W It's
not how much hop you hare on
your fast on or how much break
you have on your curve but how
much tavvy there 1 out there on
th mound that eount heaviest
In modern pitching.
Th American leagu offers In
evidence Letty Grove, Red 8nx
southpaw, and Ted Lyons. Whit
Sox right-hander, a living proof
it takes more than ped and
curve to becqm a urccsful pit
cher. Thus two gray-beard
Grove will be 40 next March 6 and
Lyon will be 40 December 23
were th two outstanding Ameri
can league pitchers last season,
according to the official average
released today.
Grove, pitching with hi noodle
and cunning, lad th regular pit
cher In earned run with an aver
age of 2.64 tor 23 games and was
fourth In the won and lost column
with 16 victories and four defeats
tor a percentage of .789.
Lyons finished second to Grove
among pltrhers who worked In 10
or more complete games, with an
earned run average of 2.46. He
won 14 games and lost six tor a
winning percentage of .700,
Grove' feat we all th more
remarkable bt cause even the
doctor were skeptical about him
ever pitching again after his arm
went dead late In the 1938 aunaon.
Heading Into his sixteenth major
league campaign since he Joined
the Athletics In 1926, Grove has a
record of 286 victories, more than
Meeting Airs
Ski Lift Plans
Plan for th Installation of
the electric ski tow at Crater
lake rim were talked over Wed
nesday night by directors and
several members of the Klamath
Fall chapter of th Crater Lake
Ski club, meeting In the circuit
court roams of th courthouse.
Regulations for th project
were received trom E. P. Leavllt,
park superintendent, and arrange
ments were made to go ahead
with the installation as soon as
equipment is approved by the
park engineer.
At Leavitt's suggestion, mem
bers of the Rogue Snowmen, ski
organixatlon at Medford, will be
contac- ' to get their coopera
tion In th project.
President Embert Fossum an
nounced that a membership drive
will stsrt next Wednesday night
at a general meeting, probably
to be held at the circuit court
rooms.
Hawaiian Team
Beats Stagmen
HONOLULU, Dec. 21 (IF)
Halfbark Jud Atchison, former
Texas university star, passed and
ran the Hoalnnl town team to an
18 to 7 football victory over (he
College of th Pacifle of Stock
ton, Calif., before a crowd of
8000 last night.
Strong pre-gam favorites, the
Healanl boy drove 66 yards for
their first tally whin the game
was only six minutes old, scored
again In the first period and got
a third touchdown In 'the third
quarter.
Pacific, which bent University
of Hawaii Saturday, scored In
th second quarter after a 47
yard drive.
BASKETBALL
Southern California 38, Purdue 34
U. of Detroit 42, John Carrol 34
Northwestern 42. Princeton 28
Drake 38, West Texas Stat 33
Brlgham Young 30, Oregon State
67
any pitcher slid active In th big
how. In that span arov has
hurled 386 complete games.
Rob Feller, Cleveland' young
tlre-baller, finished third In earned
runs with a record of 1.16 and
led th league In victories with a
record of 24 and nln for a per
centage of .717. Feller, who was
21 November 3. I th only pitcher
under 29 to finish among th first
nln earned run loaders. John
Hlgney, Whit Sox, who finished
tenth, is 26, while all the other
are past 30 except Lefty (loinos,
Yankees, who finished fifth and
Emll Leonard, Senators, who
placed eighth. Gomel and Leonard
are 29.
Feller, however, did more than
his share holding up the young
sters' end against the old timers,
He captured the strikeout croan,
fanning 146, and tied with Red
Ruffing, Yankees, tor the most
shutouts, with four each. Ho also
tied Ruffing for th most com
plete games, each with 24. Feller
had tho greatest record of low hit
games, hurling two one-hit games,
three three-hitters and two four
hitters. There wer only four 10-gsin
winners. Hesldes Kellor, they were
Hutting, with 21 and seven; Emll
Leonard, with 20 and eight, and
Buck Nawsom, Tigers, with 30
and 11. It was the fourth straight
year Uniting hn won 20 or more.
Keller walked the most men,
143, and unfurled th most wild
pilches, 14. Vernon Kennedy,
Tiger and Drowns, lost th most
game. 20.
In This Corner
By JACK Gl'K.NTIIKR
United I'rt'M Raring tvlltor
NKW YORK. Dee. 21 (U.PJ One
of the favorite maxim of bank
presidents and horse bettors Is
that only two things In th world
are certain. They are death and
taxes, or, If you prefer, taxes and
deifth. Iloth have withstood the
test of time until their durability
Is no longer a question.
Hut today we'd like to nomin
ate a third candidate for election
Into this select circle of perfectly
sure things. Our candidal also
has withstood the time teat satis
factorily. 11 has don more.
Every year and every season he
ha com back smarter end
tronger and happier.
We refer to that benign flar
nura of th Bluegraas, Colonel
Matt Winn.
The colonel Is proven router.
Million of gallons of Ohio river
water hav flowed under the
Louisville bridge slur the colonel
enme to town. It' been 66 year
since Winn, the boy, clung to his
father' hand one spring day In
1876 and watched Utile Red
Arlstldes scamper home In a new
fangled race the tnwnfnlk were
proudly calling the Kentucky
derby. '
It's been almost 40 year since
Winn, the man, took over the
derby and Churchill Downs him
self. That was In 19U1 and the
race of th roses was still Just
a neighboring picnic, little known
outside of the far reaches of th
dark and bloody ground. No
th year I late 1939. Winn, 10
time a grandfather, la pushing
the high 70s, but he's rolling
along ns swiftly as ever as top.
hand of 0110 of the greatest sport
hows on earth,
There has been much talk or
late about "I'rnakness pressure"
and a new high-power adminis
tration at Belmont park and how
th derby was on th way down.
The colonel took care of that talk
all by hlmsolf,
A driver who wont through a
sovor accldont whon he fell
asleep at th whool said ho
thought It was all a bnd riruam.
The bill for damages to his car
will wake him up.
At Klamath Rwronllon
ri.ANHIO I.KAGUK
Tom Wallers In.uraiii'
Victory ..143 141 111) 461
Bh.ets 166 139 180 486
McMillan .......218 238 163 614
Walter .......Hl 164 211 (17
Strong 163 166 168 497
Handicap ........ 68 66 68 104
919 914 969 1791
Klamath llllllartls
Martin
Karrar ....
Cheyn ....
Hweasy
Hyd
Handicap
.170 144 H6
150 148 130
.....137 186 190
173 140 186
177 1(3 186
42 43 42
489
438
611
606
616
136
8(8 821 900 2(79
Southwell Accountants
Owens MS 178 168 (14
Klenss .....15.1 1(7 163 (01
Woollngton ....191 100 162 (73
Houthwell 178 202 181 (61
Hess -.178 169 200 (34
Handicap 28 26 26 64
932 024 931 2767
Mntl l''liiiii'Kn'a
lliltl 172 HI 180 494
Fischer 111 148 1(8 446
Groat . 132 1(9 172 463
Clark K 184 1(4 494
Carter 160 1 40 189 489
Handicap ....... (8 66 69 206
830 641 923 2(98
T-lkmo t'afa
Welch 304 184 172 (60
Month 196 38 r, 200 611
Poller 118 I.K 142 4 16
llray ...173 180 194 (47
Haley 177 161 201 lit
Handicap 68 68 68 204
934 973 997 I'J04
Wilson ..
Rosa ....
Oelgor ..
Drlsroll
Leftwleh
Handicap ...
I'alarn Market
101 30.1 183
176 216 248
161 234 143
88 173
.203 309 183
36 26 26
. 200
(89
642
633
(41
(98
78
971 1066 961 3996
Kngle Card Rixim
Lavenlk I0 314 147 (81
I.. I'aslega ......144 1(1 1 19 436
Gardner ....174 164 193 631
Hold 1 i 4 !n 120 432
Iteistnr 166 lit) 149 484
Handicap 84 64 (4 252
Rayles ,
lloland
Webb
Rarkes ,
Kdson ...
Handicap
934 940 812 2486
Dirk ItifHler's
.'...1(3 131 146 499
1 S7 146 196 bit
.. ..1 28 107 189 464
160 162 194 636
179 146 199 (23
63 63 63 186
889 (83 1006 37(7
Fight Results
IIOXING
By The Assoriatnl Pro
CAMDKN, N. J (Ins Derails.
166I. Philadelphia, outpointed
Charley Maasera, 189, New York,
(8).
I'ROVIHKNCK. R. 1. Larry
Rolvln, 121, 1'rovldeiice, stop
ped Tony Duprt, 123, Manches
ter, N. II , (2).
W RUSTLING
BOSTON Steve (Cruahef)
Casey, 230, Ireland, and Huhhy
Managnff, 220, Chicago, drew, on
fall each, 00 minutes.
IIARRIHIIL'RU. I'a. nohhy
Ilruna, 217, Kanaas City, threw
Ilrunek Kagurskl, 210, Poland,
28:10.
IILOO.MINOTON,. In. Illlly
Thorn, 170. Indliiim. threw Billy
Weldner, 190, San Francisco, 28
minutes.
Best Quality Men'
Half Soles $
(fnr1. N tlrcas Mhnes, IT.
Jack Frost Shoe Shop
Silllrlf (raism
Month Olli HI., Juki (Iff Mnln
- XX X XJ v ir.w : -
4
a trice-
J WOW u IKrtKS ULU
it l
within reach of every man's purse!
Windsor today is finer than trver
M your first taito will tell you. That
txlra 'year of aging produced 6uch
smoothncjs and superb flavor that
vtry drink li a royal good onel
ft
'!'ii..3rHMi 1
This
whlikey Ii
3 years old
Windsor
llhl P..rW"
'hljkii)
TOtm OUts TO
I $1.45 QT. 68.45 ML rZA W,
When burins Swrfcon uk Jt t':-M ItOOj
Vh WlmHf aim tw,glf'
X
oooBMOuots NATIONAL DISTILLERS PROD. COUP. N.