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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 15, 1949)
y 7 State's Kip Taylor Grins r But Makes No Prediction By MATT KRAMER CORVALUS, Or., Sept. 15. (.? Oregon Stale looki no bet ter than ,a middle-of-the-heap football team this year, but rival are getting uneasy over 'he con tinued grins from new Coach Kip Taylor. There is a growing suspicion that ' Taylorfresh from the ranks of rough, tough midwest ern football thinks he has some thing here. Everything else points to a fifth or sixth place finish for the Beavers. The talent is about the same as last year's team, which finished sixth in the coast conference. The entire coaching staff Is new, and could be ex pected to take at least a year to put a new system into effect. But there is this one thing a howling enthusiasm by the play ers, a spirit not seen in recent Beaver teams. And Taylor grins. Lettrmn Return He has 23 lettermen from last year's squad, which was about as potent offensively as any team in the conference, but which was seized by let-downs that enabled rivals to run up even more touch downs than the Beavers pro duced. The question is, will the Beav ers' new spirit preclude any let downs? Taylor, an assistant at Michi gan Stale last year, gives no answer, but he grins. So do his 4 assistants, brothers Pete and Dependable-4 Performance with'cT, SssssslallHH isssssssV JfSSTON CH4N SAW Designed and built by Diiiton, America's foremoit saw manu facturer, this is the saw you need to lower your com and step up your production. It's asy to operate, and built for trouble-free service. Let us give you all the facts about the Diiiton Chain Saw with Mercury Gasoline Engine. Come in and talk it over. CARL J. PEETZ 920 8. Steohens Phone 27S Cleat Soles Click With Your Crowd! Wear this popular favorite to school this fall, and be a style leader with your crowdl It's a brawny, strapping partem that's preferred among school athletes Mighty fine valuel aazu e 5 Right on Jackson OF INCXA.OO Nrrr HALLS HAVt LONOJ -fUfjKS WHICH Am. USU M DlGGINO BULB OUT OT THE. GROUXX ON WHICH TktT FUD lsS? r suit TWL Bump Elliott of recent Michigan fame and line Coach Len Younce. an Oregon State graduate who has Just completed six years in professional football. Uelans New Coach This will make a natural six years of the Beavers' opening game against UCLA at Los An geles Friday night. The Uelans also have a new coaching staff under Henry (Red) Sanders. If either team Is to prove embar rassing to the acknowledged lead ers, the fact should come out then. Taylor, like Sanders, features the singlewing. To make it go he has a first string of nine vet erans, two sophomores. The line, which had a defensive weakness last year, looks stronger,, headed by two standout guards. Captain Tom de Sylvia and Ed .Car mlrhael. The hacks are three deep. The standout there is Ken Carpenter, the conference's top offensive left half last season. Bowling Scores WOMEN LIAGlt TEAM STANDINGS W Mtxtlcal ArU Lab 3 Sohernert Squirts S Roy O. Young . 3 Mvrtle Creek Bld. Sup.. 1 Shah mar Room 1 Roacburg Jeweler uimei sept. 13. Tuetaav nifnt Medical ArU Lab 3. Rom burg Jewel- 1 o. Scherner Squtrta t. Shalt mar Room 1. Rny O. Younge I. Myrtle Creek 1. Huh individual came ecora. Francis Biilak. 1M High Individual aeries score, Evelyn rtngerlos. 307. ROSEBURG JEWFLERS Plngerloa 10T 02 rr SM 134 . 3AT 122 121 J7 IIS 3H4 lent 431 H. Mtntzcr IM r. McDonald l ToUU eis saa 171877 MEDICAL ARTS LAB r. KnudUon 1T7 1S9 137 414 H. Bltn.r 141 1.11 l.TT 429 E. Campball 1.13 1 138 4.18 P. Martin 130 108 114 333 C. Hllllard 148 l.TT 192 431 Totala 70S 111 78 2087 8HAL1MAR BOOM M. Laraon 133 102 180 SOS Barker 137 1 22 113 372 T Currin 8ft IIS 133 340 W. Bishop 08 118 88 305 r. Biatak I8S 131 123 438 ToUU SIS 881 817 1&80 SCHERNEHS BOirfBTB M. Clrcla 151 IN) 188 488 E. Batt . 120 88 142 3M V. Bmirock - 140 13S 111 308 H. Rvan , 118 130 129 3A8 C rinserloa 188 155 184 507 Total! 74 1313104 MYRTLE CR. BLDC SUPPLY E. Ltdserwood .. 138 C. Chapln 134 103 141 380 101 384 148 443 149 130 114 148 Groom 181 M. Shlrtcliff ...... 150 K. Jo net 121 ISO 394 142 417 Total! 714 S3 3030 ROY O YOUNGS G. Frcadman 104 181 123 Ml M. Porklinaton 128 A. WrliaerW . 117 E. Sallwrt . 141 R. Porter 153 133 111 133 138 120 382 133 389 172 448 141 423 ToUU 843 890-2019 O & C Timber To Go On Sale Late In Month Daniel L. Goldy, regional ad ministrator, region I, Bureau of Land Management, reported to day that ten parcels of O. and C. timber carrying a volume of 5. 415.000 board leet of timber and 750 lineal feet of cedar poles with an appraised value of $36,627.50 will be offered for sale beginning Sept. 26. Seven of the parcels will be offered for sale by sealed bias on Sept. 27 at the regional adminis trator's office in Portland. These tracts carry a volume of 3.460. 000 board feet of timber and 750 lineal feet of cedar poles with a value of $26,955.00. The three remaining parcels will be offered for sale at oral auction on Sept. 26, 27 and 28. One parcel carrying a volume of 255.000 board feet appraised at $2,244.00 will be offered Sept. 26 at the office of the Bureau of Land Management. 217 Postoffice building. Coos Bay. Another parcel will be offered for sale Sept. 27 at Eugene at the bureau's office in the Postoffice building. This tract carries a vol ume of 575.000 board feet of Mm-, ber appraised at $1,400.00. The remaining parcel will be offered Sept. 28 at Roseburg in the Postoffice building. This tract is valued at $6,028.50 and carries 1,125.000 board feet. The tracts are located within the following counties: Benton. Douglas. Jackson, Josephine, and Lane counties. The first successful Ironworks in North America was built in Massachusettes on the Saugus river between Boston and Salm. There's no digging to find foir prices on quolity con crete products ot the PRE MIX CONCRETE CO. ... every item we moke is a real bargain because it possesses quality as well os low prices. Let us help you plan your new home . . . our concrete is sure to please and meet your requirements. 1 -'0m. GROCERY HEIR WEDS ACTRESS Huntington Hartford, III. 38, grocery fortune heir, and his bride, Marjorie Steele, 19, actress and former nightclub cigarette girl, are shown in their Hollywood, Calif., home after he disclosed they were married Sept. 10 at Gardnerville, Nov. u 0 VI- 1 .if - - Z..-- initATtr Pliril IQT-A battle In the middle of the Sclota Kvirit SiS to an end as f.rtmen escort Emersorj M. from the scene of his aquatic fisticuffs. Swetman and George s"hn.7t Shown? fought for 45 minutes before scrugglln f remen SnS IZ 'pS". the river. The after a. 1" r ,rgument whue the men were lishlntg. Teachers Of Sutherlin To Be Welcomed Friday The teaeners of Sutherlin will be welcomed at a reception Kri oav evening, Sept. 16. The public Is invited. Frank Holgate, student body president, is general chairman lor the event and will Introduce the entertainment and principal speakers of the evening. A community sing, a duet by the Lucas sisters, solo by Pals Ross, piano solo by Barbara Mil- LOW COST automobile financing through the Roseburg Branch of the United States National Bank All your dealings are here at home when you finance your car purchase through the Roseburg Branch of The United States National Bank. Low bank rates ... tailor made terms. Suggest to your dealer that he finance your car through this bank. Any of these dealers will gladly arrange United States National Bank financing. Borcut Soles t Service Cooper Motor Company Corkrum Motors Inc. Hansen Motor Company Keel Motor Company NO PREVIOUS ARRANGEMENTS NECESSARY 5S AN OREGON BANK IAP Wirephoto). V d; 1 A -4 1' J I.N IKT.A TnUtJutf) ler, high school music supervis or; trumpet solo by Curtis Win ders. band instructor will be the evening's entertainment. The school superintendent, principals, members of the facul ty, the school board, and the Parent-Teachers association will be highlighted In the event. Shawl weaving has virtually ended in India's Vale of Kash mir, where it was a famed in dustry for centuries. Lockwood Motors Roseburg Hudson Company Roseburg Motor Company Smith Motors Umpqua Auto t Implement Ce. SERVING OREGON Railroad Adjustment Board Bogged Down; Problems Are For Railroad Men To Settle By NORMAN WALKER (For James Marlow) WASHINGTON CTt For IS years a sore spot has been festering In labor relations on the railroads. It's getting worse all the time. It's the main reason for the present strike on the big Missouri Pacific railroad. It's rankling la bor dealings on practically every other railroad in the country. What's it all about? Not wages. nor hours, nor the usual reasons you read every day for strikes or threats of strikes in other indus tries. The railroad fuss Is simply this: A growing batch of arguments between the operating unions and rail managers over the terms of heir contracts. Opinions Differ ine unions say some contract clause means one thing. The man agers say it means another. These grievances pile up, unsettled, un til one day there is a strike threat. This has been going on. and getting worse, ever since 1934. Then Congress, as asked by the railroads and rail unions, set up an agency called the National Railroad Adjustment board: It has panels composed of equal numbers of union and manage ment men, supposed to settle such grievances. 1 nere are lour panels, all based at Chicago. All have been getting along okay except one. That one deals with grievances brought by ran operating employes such as engineers, firemen, trainmen, conductors. Things Go Bad Things went Dad with the operating workers' panel from the start. Because labor contracts covering these workers are so Lower Prices m fm '- .... A I , r ) f t ill 1 rim Ji Heavy Duty FLANNEL SHORTS Eight Cwlorftil plaids Long witting cotton flannil Ezpirtly talltrid Full euf, pn-ihrunk Man's slut, 14-17 complicated, it now has a backlog ot more than 3,000 grievances. Of ficials estimate it will take four or five yeara to settle them. This doesn't leave much room for new ones. So the unions representing the the engineers and other operating employes have just about put a bovcott on the adjustment board. They won't take their cases there any more. A few months ago railroad managements and the unions got together to try to clear a way through this blockade. They agreed to set up two more panels to work along with the over burdened one. The Idea was to make prompt settlement of griev ances possible. N Money A good Idea but Congress hasn't appropriated the money yet to put the new panels into operation. The unsettled disputes are rat tling around until the unions get tired ot waiting and call a strike. A threatened atop in rail serv ice makes a problem for the Na tional Mediation board. This is a seoarate agency, charged with helping the carriers and their unions write new contracts with out strikes. These threatened strikes have often caused the White House to name special fact-finding boards to look into the trouble and at tempt to avoid a atrike. Lately these boards have all recom J. N. BOOR OUTBOARD MOTORS SM Cola. Valltr 4 Pk aso-J-i Johnson tea Horse Dealer lha QD-10 with Grar Shirt and Ulla-Maalar Tank. Bur on Bank Taroia . HERE'S PROOF THAT si4ty tnoutl. MERCHANDISING MAGIC Does Mean - Higher Quality 11. 1 fli A W 98 Thur., Sept. IS, H4f-The News-Review, kosebura. Ore. mended the same thing: Take the grievances to the adjustment board because that's Its job. But, as we've seen, the adjust ment board is bogged down. The unions are sore about it, and the railroads are facing strikes which they feel are unjustified and un necessary. In a number of cases railroads . ve proposed letting an outsider come m to make a final ruling of pending grievances. That's arbi tration. But the unions don't want that. They say the cases are too compli cated for a layman that the railroad men themselves have to work them out, either through the adjustment board once It gets working right, or In collec tive bargaining. From where Ae I was driving down Mala Street last Saturday, another ear awung out riiht in front of no. It tanwd out to be Back Blake. He went going fast It was juat that ke had something else on his ain4 at that particular atoaaent. Buck's really one of the nicest fellows I've ever known. But, sometimes he gets to day-dreaming on the road. He sort of rets a "blind spot" to what's going oa about him I Now, lata of carnally conaidar ata folks have their "blind spots. Cprrit POSITIVE PROOF. 6,"f"3 II yz$l II FAMOUS ESTEEM mm Top quality whita (aead danlm Rough, tough, long lasting Authentic Wastarn styla Sanfarlzad for parmanant (it Bar tacked and rivaled MENS SIZES Waist 28 to 38 Length 29 to 36 BOY'S SIZES 10 tt 16 401 West Cass St. at Pine Opposite Railroad Depot pitch en out PITTSBURGH. Sept. 15. CB Erny (Tiny) Bonham, 36. veteran Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher, died today In Presbyterian hospital where he had been operated 0.-1 for appendicitis. Doctors said his death was caused by complica tions following the operation. The letter "S" is said to be the most fi-equently used capital ini tial letter in the English langu age. A. f. Walter Kresse, M. 0. Physician and Surgeon U. S. National Bank Annex Room 217 Office Phone: 1300 Ra.t rairhavan Apia. Phone last fflc hours: Mon. Thru Sat I sit Joe Marsh Sure You Haven't A "Blind Spot"? It could be anytkhat frasa ekr dreaming while driving a ear to hamming out loud at tke moria. From where I sit, it's nighty important to be on guard against your owa "blind spots." The other fellow has a right to his "share of the road," too whether it's hav ing a taste for a temperate glass of sparkling beer or a desire to lis ten to some classical music if ke wants to. At, "4, C'siMat 5 tares Brtrnm 179 49 OF ROSEBURG i