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Every Sunday, thousands of people, from young kids to pensioners, drag themselves out of bed to play football. Every one of them has a dream about what they will be, or what they might have been. A lot of them think that they could have been professional footballers. Some of them know, deep down inside, that they should have been pros. This is the comic story of one of those players, who with the help of his Sunday team-mates, tries to con his way into a professional contract. They develop a complex plot to convince the maverick owner of a local non-league club that he is a rising star from…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Every Sunday, thousands of people, from young kids to pensioners, drag themselves out of bed to play football. Every one of them has a dream about what they will be, or what they might have been. A lot of them think that they could have been professional footballers. Some of them know, deep down inside, that they should have been pros. This is the comic story of one of those players, who with the help of his Sunday team-mates, tries to con his way into a professional contract. They develop a complex plot to convince the maverick owner of a local non-league club that he is a rising star from Chile, who is simply too good to miss! It's all a story of course, but who knows, sometimes dreams do come true.
Autorenporträt
My roots are firmly embedded in the business of oil and gas and the vast amount of items that have resulted from its manufacture, sale and containment. My great grandfather founded the Continental Refining Company, better known as CORECO, in my home town of Oil City, Pennsylvania, in 1885. His name was Thomas Anderton, and he founded the company with two other men, who he bought out that same year. They went off in separate directions, too, and were quite successful in their own endeavors. Louis Waltz went on to form the Penn Refining Works, or as it is known today, Pennzoil. Pennzoil is still a strong presence in our community and employs many local people at its Rouseville, Pennsylvania, refinery. By 1915, CORECO had numerous local and regional distributors of its products. It consisted of more than fifty service stations spread out over three Canadian provinces, plus dozens of rail facilities and an ocean port facility in Pennsylvania. CORECO used the trademarks Pennselect, Continental Motor Oil, CORECO and Penntinental, and also produced a wide variety of other products including floor oil, dry cleaning agents, glass cleaners and even livestock sprays. Unfortunately, little remains today of what was once a flourishing refinery. After the war, crude oil, which had once been so plentiful and dependable, could be found no longer. Without these valuable resources for refinement, business became more difficult. Besides that, competitors began to merge into major refineries and the smaller companies were forced out of business. Today is a sharp contrast from the early years of the company, when many of my uncles as well as my father worked for CORECO. The company I started in 1989, Collectors Auction Services, specializes in the sale of early Gas and Oil memorabilia. We hold, and continue to establish, many world records in the sale of these wonderful, beautiful and interesting artifacts of a bygone era. If you're ever lucky enough to visit the historic Oil Region, be sure to stop at the numerous noteworthy sites that dot the area. Drake Well Park, located in Titusville, Pennsylvania, is where the first oil well in the world was drilled. It is situated next to Oil Creek, which flows through the Oil Creek Valley and is known as the "Valley That Changed World." Collectors Auction Services holds several catalogued sales a year that include the finest Oil and Gas memorabilia that has ever been offered for sale. The company also sponsors the Historic Oil Region's Annual Oil & Gas Swap Meet in Oil City, Pennsylvania, each July. You can call us at (814) 677-6070 or e-mail me at: manderton@mail.usachoice.net with any questions or comments. We sincerely hope you find this book helpful and educational and above all, enjoy it. It was truly a labor of love.