THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1940 NNER AAA $ Today's Sporting Features § Pepsi-Colas Lose in Kingston, Round Tied. Pet Stock Terriers Win First of Semi-Finals. Minor League Lacrosse Playoffs Start Tonight. | Lions Even Their Series Pepsi-Colas Lose n Kingston, Round Tied } Today' Parkdale Derbys Beat Sporting Features ¢ Oshawa Lions Defeat Acadians to Tie Round. Westmount Broncs Play in Toronto This Wed, WRI Peterboro, Enter Finals. w So it's Oshawa and Parkdale Derbys in the finals for the cham- plonship of the Inter-City Senior Baseball League. ; LE I Well, at least we should say "Maybe!" After stalling around for nearly three full weeks wait- ing from Monday until Saturday without playing a game, play- ing only single games on a Sat- urday or holiday, now the Inter- City League officials in Toronto want to have Oshawa play Parkdales--in Toronto, tonight or Tuesday--or Wednesday, in the first game of the League finals, i, PP However, the Oshawa Senior Base- + ball Club--headed by their little blonde battler, Pres. "Peg" Hurst, are not going to be pushed around any longer. Oshawa headed the league race, finished in first place and according to the league's play- off rules, are netitled to the firsl game of the play-offs here in Osh- | awa: * + Pb SO0--the Oshawa club has no- tified the Inter-City League of- ficials that the first game of the Inter-City finals will be here in Oshawa--on Saturday and not before--or there'll be no Inter-City League finals, Osh- awa feels that they have been kept waiting by continual "stall- ing" and they do not intend to be rushed now in the finals. We are tickled to death to see Mgr. Peg Hurst and his mates take this firm stand and we are right behind them. It's time somebody showed our "Hog Town" friends that they can't just run everything when and how they like. * + Pb The Oshawa Club has offered one good suggestion. They have offered «if the Inter-City League officials really want to hurry things along-- to shorten the Inter-City League finals to a 2-out-of-3 series (pro- widing Oshawa wins two of the first three games) but to leave it at 3- out-of-5 as originally scheduled, providing Parkdale Derbys win more than one of the first three games. That's giving 'em a taste of their own "If and When" system and of gourse we don't expect Pete Hast- ings and his Derbys to go for it--but #t's fun suggesting it. * + % Peterboro had only a make-shift line-up for Saturday against the Derbys. Al Clark, Bun Kingdon and {Les Burton were among their ab- sentees, all three of them regulars. . * ob Parkdale Derbys won in Pet- erboro on Saturday afternoon, 10-2, and since Riverdale Grads (as Bowles) were busy in De- troit playing softball, they had to deault their game to Peter- boro. ob P . Parkdale Derbys, with Skipper -Hastings at the helm and their ace moundsman, Art Terry, the :lanky right-hander who looks like "big league" timber, will make 'things mighty interesting for the classy Motor City Club, in the final series. The Derbys have been com- -ing fast in the last three weeks, 'and have improved their brand of 'ball by concentrated efforts. They 'played a league game here some 'weeks ago and had to win in order 'to protect their chance of a play- -off berth. They won in the 1lth inning and since then they have been the "hottest" team in the Inter-City League. ob Bp Whether or not they can keep up their dizzy pace and wipe out Oshawa in the finals is an- other question, but oae thing is certain--they'll make a great bid to do it. de kB "Peg" Hurst and his Motor Men "have been practising regularly in "the last two weeks and are anxious 'to get into the finals before -their Jay-off extends any longer. Now that the time has arrived, base- ball interest will zoom again here in Oshawa and summer will return _=we hope. . LE : It hasn't been settled as yet where Pepsi-Colas and Kingston Tanaers will play their third and sudden-death game of the Eastern Ontario Intermediate softball finals. It is apt to be this Wednesday in Belleville or more 'likely, in Trenton, on Thursday. Each team refused to play ea the other's home diamond. LE Tanners were toa good for the Pepsi-Colas on Friday in the Lime- stone City. "Cowboy" Smith held the Pepsis to only eight hits and they did get them in bunches, they couldn't score enough runs to (offset the two big rallies staged {by the homesters, Tanners pushed across four in the first inning when "Preem" Whiteley started out with a streak of wildness and walked three of the first five bat- ters. This, along with two hits and an error, paved the way for the four tallies. * + Bb The big blow-up came in the middle of the game, when after holding the score at 4-2 for five innings, Pepsis went down before a six-run rally. The Kingston bat- ters rattled a single, a homer, and | four doubles, all in succession, to score six runs and the ball game was over. The Oshawa boys came back with a rally or two, but they couldn't get clicking for any big splurges. +* + b Playing on their own field, before about 3,000 fans, the Kingston team showed them- selves to be worthy Eastern Ontario finalists. They played a much improved brand of ball, hit harder and more often and starred defensively, with Smith being very good oa the mound and his mates giving him staunch support in the tight spots. * b+ 3 While not offering any alibis, for they admit they were beaten by a better team on Friday, Pepsis insist that if they can get a full team out, they'll cop the third and decid- ing game. The absence of their regular shortstop, Don Cornish, along with their clean-up hitter, Moose Matthews, and also Lefty Thomson, another heavy hitter, didn't leave the Oshawa team with too much offensive strength, al- though they did play very well in the field, with Liitle, in left, along with Covert and McLaughlin, pull- ing off the best catches of the game, Taylor's one-handed stab at second was a gem, too. * * Oshawa Lions tied up their juvenile playoff series with the Toronto Acadians, when they met at Alexandra Park on Sat- urday afternoon. It was a hec- tic game, full of errors aud arguments. The Oshawa team played wretched ball in the field and were guilty of a raft of errors that made scoring easy for the Toronto team. How- ever, the Lions managed to do fairly well at the plate, and a homer, in the eighth, with two men on bases, gave them a 15-14 victory over Acadians. +* % * It has not yet been decided where the third and deciding game will be played, but it will likely /be next Saturday afternoon, since the Ju- veniles are now in the zone finals and the only other games after that are optional, challenge series with other Juvenile zone cham- pions. * % No score book for the Lions- Acadians game was turned in so we haven't any details available of the game. However, we do not know that Lions had a host of bad errors but home-runs by Daniels, McIntyre, Fowler and McArthur helped offset these miscues. McArthur got the homer in the 8th, with two on bases, that won the game while Fowler was the big hitter of the day. +» + Westmount Broncs meet East Riverdales, the Toronto Junior champions, in their second round of the playdowns, this Wednesday afternoon in Toronto. The return game will be at the Motor City Stadium next Saturday afternoon or evening, depending on whether there is a senior baseball play-off game in Oshawa that afternoon. LE I Here at home, down at the Stadium this evening, the Minor League lacrosse playoffs, in the bantam and midget series, will get wader way. There are games at the Stadium every night this week. The youth- ful players and their coaches, men such as "Shine" Bovin, Jim Kerwin, "Casey" Luke and others, who have given much of their time this summer to coaching these kid teams, would certainly appreciate a big at- tendance at these playoff games. There is no admission charge and the first game starts to- night at 6.30 o'clock. LR BE Toronto Bowles A.C. lost a tough decision in their Detroit tournament for the softball championship of the world. Cam Ecclestone pitched four games in two days. On Saturday he won a 1-0 decision that went 24'in- nings before being decided. Yester- day, Bowles went out 3-2 in the 14th inning of their semi-final game, + * The American League race still rages with Yankees, only one game behind the leaders, Indians and Tigers who are tied for first. In the National League, things are quite as hectic. TERRIERS COP FIRST GAME OF SEMI-FINALS Pet Stock Terriers took the first game of their semi-final series in the Oshawa Juvenile softball play- downs, on Friday night at Bathe Park, when they defeated Cedar- dale Vikings by a score of 9 to 4. Vikings had only seven players to start the game and Terriers agreed to permit them to start with the under-sized team. Terriers scored four runs in the first inning on a double by Dawson and Smeagle, In the second frame, Terriers got two more runs on a hit and a walk and an infield er- ror. After that, Locke pitched good ball for the Vikings and kept the Pet Stock boys under control, but the damage had been done. . Vikings met tough opposition in their attempt to get runs off the offerings of Bud Morey. Not only was Morey in fine form, but he received excellent support from his teammates. Vikings got one in the first on a two-bagger by Andeley and added another on Maga's triple in the second frame, but after that they failed to get a man to third base until the seventh and they didn't score again until the last frame, the ninth, when Klimuk hit a homer and later Barriage hit a two-bagger and scored on a single by Magee, who was the best bat- ter at the plate for Vikings. Kewin, Bathe and Smeagle were tops for the Terriers. : Vikings and Terriers will play the return game of the series at Lake- view Park on Monday evening at 6.15 o'clock. Vikings--Andley, c¢; Tuton, 2b; Kurello, '1b; Salmers, 1f; Klimuk, rf and 1b; Maga, 3b; Locke, p; Barriage, cf; Magee, ss. Terriers--B. Barker, ¢; Kewin, 3b; Morey, p; Bathe, 2b; E. Barker, 1b; Dawson, lf; Smeagle, rf, Galford, cf; Mackay, ss. BILLY CONN PUTS K.0. ON BOB PASTOR Madison Square Garden, New York, Sept. 9.--Billy Conn used Bob Pastor's "tummy" as a bass 'drum for his left-hand drumstick on Friday night and knocked out the ex-collegian in 13 rounds, but the body blow that did the trick started an immediate explosion in fistic circles. : Every one had his own idea as to whether the final left. hook to the mid-section in the thirteenth round was fair or foul. And Referee Billy Cavanagh didn't straighten matters out any by announcing afterward that if Pastor had re- gained his feet before the ten-count he not only would not have been knocked out, but would actually have won the round under the New York State rules. Immediately, Jimmy Johnston, Pastor's manager, announced. he would appear before the New York State Athletic Commission next Monday to protest that his fighter was "knocked out by a foul blow after Billy had been warned for this rule violation three times pre- viously." w For 12 full rounds, he wore down the New York heavyweight with an assortment of left hooks, both high and low, to the body. In the thirteenth, with Bob dog-tired from frying to get out of the way of these swings, Billy flattened him for the full ten count. Pastor went down for the third and final time from a left-right-left to the mid-section, and Referee Billy Cavanagh counted him out. At eight, he tried to get up, but he couldn't make it, and at ten he slumped flat on his face. Thus did the Pittsburgh cham- pion, who, at 174 pounds, was still under the light-heavyweight limit, make good his campaign to get at the Brown Bomber. Conn's Punches Low The winner of Friday night's tussle has been promised a shot at' the heavyweight boss by Mike Jacobs, and there was no question about who was the winner here. Pastor, scaling 180 3-4, was well beaten, although there's no telling how much some of the "abdicat- ing" light-heavyweight champion's low punches took out of him. Three times Billy was warned for hitting below the belt, and two rounds were taken away from him for this viola- tion. One of these--the twelfth-- he lost after knocking Bob clean through the ropes for a count of nine, LIONEL COLEMAN WINS THREE TITLES Lionel Coleman of Hamilton, proved himself top man jn the ama- teur bicycle races, staged in front of the Grandstand of the C.N.E. on Saturday. Coleman fok three cham- pionships, and finfshed second in a fourth event, y "Never Quit," Says Lefty Warming the bench for some time now, Robert Moses "Lefty" Grove, veteran pitcher of the Boston Red quit" the game he loves. Sox, today vowed he would "never "Lefty" is shown ABOVE in Red Sox dress- ing room at Fenway Park as Trainer Win Green bandages injured ankle, technically known as a spli ntered cuneiform bone of the foot. Despite his injury, "Lefty" intends to play baseball with a burning ambition to hurl 300 major league victories before hanging up his spikes even if he ends his days as a relief hurler, Parkdale Derbys Earn Right to Meet Oshawa in Senior Finals Derbys Win 10-2 Decision Over "Petes" in Liftlock City to Emerge From Semi-Final, Round-Robin Series Peterborough, Sept. 9.--Pete Hast ings' Parkddle Derbys qualified te meet Oshawa in the final round for the T.B.A| senior title here Satur- day when they walloped a weaken- ed Peterborough club, 12 to 2. Parkdale Tunis, If .... Hastings, 3b Harrison, ss . Jeffers, cf .. Flake, ¢ Crawford, 1b . Naim, 2b ..... =] be Levinsky, tf .. Terry, p .. Jotals Petérbogough @&. Clark, 3b .... J. Hollin'h, 2b ..... Kearns, cf ... Whatley, ¢ .... L. Hollin'h rf . Murphy, ss Cadd, 1b Jakafby, If Whitehill, Pp .ooeveee rea oanacel Cl 3] [OC CR ROR CR = oy LC Nl Wom wWoOoOoONMN~NO ssssanenens Totals ...coocenes Parkdale .... 000 200 802--12 Peterborough 000 001 010-- 2 Runs batted in--Lewis 2, Levin- sky, Harrison, Nairn 3, Terry 2, Jeffers, J. Hollingsworth, Clark. Earned runs--Parkdale 4, Petes 1. Home run--Clark, Two-base hits-- Nairn 3, Lewis, Terry, J. Hollings- worth. Struck out--By Terry 1, Whitehill 3. Bases on balls--Off Terry 2, Whitehill 2. Hits--Off Whitehill, 12 in 8 2-3 innings; Jakafby, 3 in 1-3. Stolen bases-- Tunis, Terry. Sacrifices -- Lewis, Levingky, Tunis, Left on bases-- Parkdale 10, Peterborough 3. Los- ing pitcher--Whitehill, Wild pitch --Whitehill. Hit by pitcher--By Jakafby (Jeffers). Umpires--Shep- pard and Dobie. NEW YORK YANKS ONLY ONE GAME BEHIND LEADERS Boston, Sept. 9.--New York Yan. kees just about washed up Boston Red Sox pennant hopes and en- hanced their own considerably yes- terday with a 9-4 triumph. Spud Chandler held the Sox to eight scattered hits, while his mates were splattering five Boston twirl- ers for twelve hits and eleven bases on balls. Joe Gordon hit a homer, triple, double and single for the Yankees and collected a pair of walks for a perfect day at bat. The world champions were still a game off the pace by virtue of In- dian and Tiger victories. WELLAND OUSTS LIZZIES Welland, Sept. 9.--Welland elim- inated Toronto Elizabeth from the Ontario Baseball Association juven- ile semi-finals on Saturday with a 3-1 decision over the Lizzies, Wel- land won the first game of the best- of-three series at Toronto 2-1 last Monday. NA RESULTS AMATEUR BASEBALL T.B.A. Senior (Semi-Final) Parkdales .... 12 Peterboro .... 2 Parkdales qualify for final. penn Niagara Senior (Final) Bt. Catherines 8 NF. Brights ... 5 Best-of-five series tied, 2-2. Intercounty Senior B (Final) Guelph . T Waterloo ,..... 3 Best-of-five series tied, 1-1, 0.B.A. Junior Tor. Kiwanis . 12 Kingston .... 3 Toronto Kiwanis wins series, 2-1. 0.B.A. Juvenile Welland 3 Tor. Lizzies .... 1 Welland wins series, 2-0, Guelph 4 Clinton .v.0eee 3 Guelph wins series, 2-0, 0.B.A. Bantam Tor. Kiwanis . 6 London .. Sudden-death semi-final, veeee B Haldimand- Norfolk : 13 Hagersville .... 6 Series tied, 1-1, T.B.A. Senior B (Final) Columbus Grass 3 Roses ........ 2 0.B.A. Midget Hamilton .... 9 Tor, Kiwanis ,. 2 0.B.A. Senior B Windosr 9 Port Colborne .. 2 Greenwood Junior Finals Cardinals . 3-4 Royals ..,.,.. 0-5 TIGERS RALLY TO NOSE OUT BROWNS AND STAY ON TOP Detroit, Sept. 9--The fighting Detroit Tigers yesterday came from behind for the fourth straight time for victory, conquering St. Louis Browns 5 to 4 to remain less than two percentage points behind Cleve- land Indians, American League pace-setters. Rudy York's twenty-sixth homer of the year with the bases empty in the eighth inning clinched De- troit's eighteenth victory in twen- ty-two games against the Brownies this year. The victory was the Tig- ers' fifth straight. The Tigers had to fight an uphill battle because ot an unexpected four-run collapse by Pitcher Lyn- wood Rowe in the fourth inning. Rowe was relieved by Paul Trout, starting the sixth. The latter gave way to Tommy Bridges with two out and the bases loaded in the seventh. Bridges got out of the dif- ficulty and made his first relief start of the season a winning one. ROOKIE VERN OLSEN CHECKS REDS, 3-1 Chicago, Sept. 9.--Vern Olsen, prize rookie of Chicago Cubs, pitch- ed his teammates to a seven-hit 3-1 victory over the National League- leading Cincinnati Reds yesterday. The victory was Olsen's eleventh of the season. Port Perry Boat Driver Betters World Record Toronto, Sept. 9.--Harold Archer, Port Perry, Ont., raised the world's record for Class D runabouts to 44.8 miles per hour as he raced his "Dil- kushae" over a measured mile at the C.N.E. waterfront on Saturday. Archer also drove his craft to a win over Percy Buddell, Waterloo, Ont., in a three-heat event for that class. In the Canadian championship for 135 cubic inch boats, E, C. Inch, London, Ont. brought his "Milder- na" down in front of Keith Gilmore, Picton, Ont., driving "Jitterbug II." In the special race for cruisers ot all classes, R. Dibble's craft, "Ga- bolo," crossed the line a winner by 18 seconds over "Silver Lark," own- ed by E. LaLonde of Toronto. BOWLES A.C. LOSE OUT IN 14-INNINGS, 3-2 Detroit, Mich., Sept. 9.--Toronto Bowles quest of the world's amateur softball championship came to an end here last night in a fourteen- inning thriller against the Bendix Brakes of South Bend, Ind. 'The Indiana team got to Cam Ec- clestone, Toronto hurler, who work- ed four straight games in two days, for two solid blows in the four- teenth and 3-2 victory. John Kupper tripled to start the rally. Ed Cleslak then lined the ball over the centre fielder's head, but was denied a homer when the alert Toronto team noticed that Cleslak had failed to tag second base. Kup- per's run counted however, there being only one out at the time. Each team obtained seven hits in the drawn-out semi-final battle of the 1940 championships. It was the second overtime game for the Canadians in as many days. Saturday night they battled twen- ty-four innings before overcoming Phoenix, Ariz, 1-0. Mimico Swamps Terriers to Cop Playoff Edge Toronto, Sept. 9.--Mimico Moun- taineers rode the crest of a scoring wave that engulfed the Orillia Ter- riers, 19-4, in an O.L.A, senior la- crosse fixture at the Mimico bowl on Sgturday night. Enjoying a five- goal lead, to start this, the second rame of a home and home series, total goals to count, to decide third place, with the winner having the choice of playing either St. Cathar- ines or Hamilton, the Terirers in- creased their lead to six as they pot- ted the first goal of the game. From that point on the Mimico Machine started to roll, as it whipped thirteen markers past Woods, in the Orillia net without a reply. Arch Dixon was the high scorer of the game, with a total of five goals. Hayes, G. Galir and Gimblett each contributed three goals and two assists. Defensively, the Mimico team reached peak form, as Mortimer handled brilliantly the few Terirer attacks that filtered through for a clean shot on goal Bill Curran worked hardest in Orillia's losing struggle, managing to score half of his team's four tallies, BOBBY FELLER IN RELIEF ROLE AS TRIBE WINS OUT 5-4 Cleveland, Sept. 9.--Bobby Feller, coming in to relieve Pitcher Al Mil- nar in the ninth inning with the score tied four-all, won his twenty- fourth victory of the year as Cleve- land Indians defeated Chicago White Sox, 5-4, in ten innings yes- terday. The victory--snapping a six-game losing streak--enabled the Indians to maintain g slight mathematical advantage over Detroit in the tie for first place in the American Lea- gue, Ray Mack drove in the winning run after Jeff Heath led off with a double and took third base on a passed ball. In the two innings Feller worked he allowed one hit, one base on balls and struck out three, DODGERS -OUTSCORE TERRYMEN TWICE New York, Sept. 9.--~The rivalry of Brooklyn Dodgers and New York Giants lured 53,623 fans to the Polo Grounds Sunday and the Dod- gers cleaned up 7-2 and 4-2 in elev. en Two Big Rallies Prove Enoug As Kingston Tanners Pound Ou Win Over Oshawa Pepsi-Cola Pepsi's Make Hits Count For Runs But "Cowboy" Smith Keeps Safeties Scattered Better in Im- proved Mound Display WINNERS HIT RUNS IN BUNCHES 6-Run Rally In 5th Inning Breaks Up Close Game When Homesters Take Sudden Liking to White- ley's Slants Oshawa Pepsi-Colas went down, 11-5, in the return game with Kingston "Tanners" in the Lime- stone City on Friday evening. The date for the third and de- ciding game of the Eastern Ontario finals, while not yet definite, is ex- pected to be this Wednesday in Trenton or Belleville, Two Big Innings Two big innings told the story in Kingston. In the opening frame, Pepsi-Colas scored two runs when Kitchen walked, went to third on Hall's sacrifice bunt and scored on a two-bagger by Covert. The lat- ter scored on a single White- ley. Tanners came right back with four runs when Whiteley started out with a bad streak of wildness. Harrison walked and Udall drove one through shortstop. Somerville grounded out, but Smith and Bone- ham walked and then Ball singled. Kinnear hit into a force and was safe on an error and in all four Fins crossed the plate, on only two its. The game progressed along with the 4-2 score in speedy fashion, with neither team doing a thing at the plate until the fatal fifth frame, when Kingston cinched the verdict with a six-run rally. It opened with a single by Ball, followed by Kinnear's homer. Then Clark, Boone, Harrison and Udell all hit two-baggers in succession and every one of the blows went out into right field, with three of the play- ers being right-handed batters. When the infield putouts had fin- ally been made, there were six runs across the plate and the ball game was "in the bag" for the home- sters. Pepsi-Colas rallied In the sixth to score two when Taylor singled, Whiteley grounded out. but Lewis doubled and Little and McLaugh- lin all connected for safe hits, scor- ing Taylor and Whiteley, but Camp- bell grounded out to shortstop, to end the inning. In the seventh, Hal singled and scored on Billy Taylor's double for Oshawa's last run of the game. Kingston got one 'more in the eighth, on a hit by Hall, who scored after an outfield catch. Billy Taylor's sensational back- ward leap to make a one-handed catch with his back to the plate, and "Dib" Little's great work in left-field, one a sensational one- handed catch, were the gems of the game, with Covert and Mec- Laughlin also each contributing a nice catch in Oshawa's outfield display. Whiteley, who was wild in the first inning and hit for six straigh hits, including a homer and fo doubles, in the fifth inning, : only these two bad frames, but the proved more than enough for th wide-awake Kingston club. Co Smith pitched much better b than in Oshawa, allowing on eight hits. Oshawa got two . on two hits in the first and onl two runs on four hits in the sixtH inning. Billy Taylor, with two hi paced the Pepsis, while most o© the other players had one 'hit each Ball, with four singles and a in five trips, was the big shot fo Kingston, with Udall being next in line, with two doubles and a singk Pepsi-Colas--Kitchen, s; Hall, 3b, Covert, cf; Taylor, 2b; Whiteley, p. Lewis, ss; Little, If; McLaughlin, rf; Campbell, 1b; Trewin, batted in ninth. Kingston--Harrison, rf; Udall, ss Somerville, If; Smith, p; Boneham 1b; Ball, 2b; Kinnear, cf; Clark, 3b Boone, c. Umpires--F. Kellar, Oshawa, and D. Thomas, Kingston, Kiwanis Juniors Beat Kingston To Win S Port Hope, Sept. 9.--Toronto Ki wanis defeated Kingston, 12 to 3 when they touched three Kingston pitch. s for twelve safeties in the thuiu and deciding game of the O.B.A. junior series Saturday after noon. Lipman went the route for Kiwanis, and was touched for eight] scattered hits. Six 'errors contributed to Ki wanis- success, particularly in t| seventh inning, when they, scor four runs with two men out. King ston were victims of a double play in the sixth inning, when Wood grounded to second base and Loy, on first base, was cut off. J. Edward and E. Bearance. Kingston's batte was replaced by Jarrell and A. Kin near in. the fifth inning, and D. O'Connor pitched in the eighth in. ning. JOHNNY MIZE SETS NEW MARK FOR HOME-RUNS St. Louis, Sept. 9.--Johnny Mi set a new major league record Sun day by hitting three home runs in one game for the fourth time in h career, but Pittsburgh Pirates did lot of fence busting of their own and moved into third place in National League by walloping St. Louis Cardinals twice, 16 to 14, and 5 to 4. Mize's homers, increasing his sea. son's total to forty-one, came on successive appearances at the plate) in the marathon opener; which extended over three hours and seve enteen minutes and forced the sec- ond game to be called at the end of] the fifth because of darkness, GUILTINAN'S CHAMPION SHOE SHOP OUR MOTTO: Better REPAIRING pleases AP customers and gets us new ones. PHONE 1216 = (Collect, Deliver 17 BOND EAST YOUR WIFE WILL LIKE THE FRAGRANCE OF TRUMP Cegaro No more checking up on the cost your smokes -- no more time "in doghouse" because your better objects to heavy, stale smoke filling the house. 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