CALL US FOR ALL
Excavating Road Building
Specializing In Construction and
Maintenance of Logging rloads
NO TRANSPORTATION CHARGE
FREE ESTIMATES
JACK E. DARLING
TRUCKER
Phones 9-8448
3-5240
P. 0. Box 208
' Roseburg, Oregon
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St- . :H
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come in and meet
QeorgeKatzung
LEE HAT
representative
George Katzung will be In our store all day Sat
urday, November 22. He will be here to answer
your questions about Lee hats and help you select
the right hat! Come in and ask for Lee Hat booklet
"How To Be Right on Top" yours for the asking.
120 North Jackson
3 Key Tilts
On Big Ten
Race Agenda
NEW HORK W-The 1952 col
legiate' football season, gaining
momentum with each succeeding
week, reacjies a fervent pitch to
morrow as top teams collide in
"do or die" efforts and "tradt
tional" affairs.
Most of the attention will evolve
around those still in contention for
a bid to the granddaddy of all
post-season classics the Rose
Bowl. After Saturday the situa
tion in both the Pacific Coast and
the Big 10 Conference races should
be clarified considerably.
Three key contests are on the
agenda in the Big 10 race.
Mich. vs. Wis.
Michigan and Wisconsin are
tied for the Western Conference
lead with identical 4-1 records.
Purdue and Minnesota share sec
ond -place at 3-1-1.
Michigan plays at Ohio State,
Wisconsin is host to Minnesota and
Purdue entertains Indiana and
anything can happen.
Michigan and Wisconsin, If they
both win, could tie for the cham
pionship, ana a conierence com
mittee would have to determine
the bowl candidate. If either Mich
igan or Wisconsin loses, the sur
vivor winds up with the trip to
Pa.-adena.
If Michigan and Wisconsin both
lose, then Purdue and Minnesota
would have a chance to tie for
the title. Ties in any of the games
also could cause some more con
fusion in the jumbled standings.
The Sugar Bowl and Cotton Bowl
both have picked their choices for
New Year's Day, but the Orange
Bowl nas not yet made any detinue
committments. Alabama, Pitts
burg and Syracuse all are possi
bilities for the Miami junket and
the three teams see action Satur
day.
Alabama will be facing a venge
ful Maryland outfit which was
knocked out of the ranks of the
unbeaten last week by Mississippi.
21-14. If the Crimson Tide can halt
the Terrapins, it could gain the
bid.
Syracuse Should Win
Syracuse, which didn't exactly
look impressive in last Saturday's
20 - 14 triumph over Colgate,
shouldn't experience too much dif
ficulty in bowling over Fordham.
Pitt may have a little more trouble
in disposing of Fenn State when
the teams meet in the 52nd re
newal of their rivalry.
Michigan State, top - ranking
team in the nation, goes after its
24th straight victory against Mar
quette. Last season Marquette
proved a stubborn foe before suc
cumbing 20-14.
Georgia Tech, the No. 2 team
which opposes Mississippi in the
Sugar Bowl, should maintain its
unblemished slate against Florida
State. Mississippi is idle.
Tennessee, second to Georgia
Tech in the Southeastern Confer
ence, can tie the Engineers nro-
! vided they get past Kentucky. The
volunteers, sevenui-ranKing in me
country, play Texas, No. 10, in
the Cotton Bowl. Texas, the South
west Conference winner, isn't
scheduled.
Duke appears a cinch for too
honors in the Southern Conference
if the Blue Devils can turn back
a weak North Carolina eleven.
Joe Black, Harry
Byrd Top Rookies
NEW YORK Wl Joe Black of
Brooklyn and Harry Byrd of the
Philadelphia A's, a pair of fine
pitchers, were named Rookies of
the Year today by the Baseball
Writers Association of America.
Black was an overwhelming
choice in the National League with
19 votes from the. 24-man com
mittee that also placed him third
in the most valuable player ballot
ing. .
Rvrri a lata bloomine hot shot.
nosed out two catchers, Clint
Courtney of the St. Louis Browns
and Sam White of the Boston Red
Sox in a three-man race. Byrd
got nine votes, Courtney eight and
White seven.
Rtliaf Work 'Known
The feats of Black are known
because his relief work was largely
responsible for the Dodger pen
nant. An also-ran in spring train
ing, Black appeared in only six
games up to June 1. Then he
started to work.
At stretches, Manager Charley
Dressen had the Negro ace work
ing every day. He wound up with
56 games, a 15-4 won and lost
record and a low earned run aver
age of 2.15. That earned run mark
was best in the league but it won t
be recognized because he did not
mtch 10 complete games or work
at least 154 innings. He started
only two games, one the last Sat-
day of the season as a tune-up
for the World Series opener.
Hoyt Wilhelm, appearing in 71
games on relief for the New York
Giants, was second to Black with
three votes. Wilhelm had a 15-3
record and his 2.43 earned run
mark won the title. He didn't start
once but he did work 159 innings,
five over the minimum.
Tied For Third
Dick Groat, Pittsburgh's short
stop from Duke University, tied
for third with Ed Mathews, Bos
ton's third baseman, with one vote
each. Groat joined the Pirates
from Duke June 18 and finished
with .285 after a slow start. Math
ews hit only .242 but he slammed
25 homers, three on Sept. 27 .to
set a record for a freshman.
The 1951 winners were Willie
Mays of the Giants, now in service,
and Gil McDougald of the New
York Yankees.
Byrd made the big jump from
Savannah of the South Atlantic
League to the majors with great
success. He finished with a 15-15
record, coming on strong in the
late stages of the season. Thus the
A's with Byrd and Bobby Shantz,
the most valuable player, corner
ed the season honors in the Amer
ican. .
Pitchtd IS Gamas
The 27-y ear-old righthander
from Darlington, S. C, pitched 15
complete games including three
shutouts. On Sept. 7 he blanked the
pennant-bound Yankees with one
hit. During the month of Septem
ber he lost 1-0 games to both
New York and Cleveland. Still he
didn't get his first, starting chance
until May 14.
Courtney and" White gave him
a real battle for the honors. Court
ney, 25, moved up from Kansas
City in the Yank-Browns trade
that brought Jim McDonald to
New York last November. The
fiery bespectacled catcher climb
ed to .280 in early August, and
finished at .286.
White, 24. came up from Class
A, like Byrd. He hit only .267 in
Scranton, Pa., of the Eastern
League last season but belted the
ball at a .300 clip until mid-August.
Although he fell off in the
closing months he finished with
.281 and 10 home runs.
Frl., Nov. 21, 1952 The News-Review, Roseburf, Or. T
Two Oregon Men
Still In Race
MEXICO CITY W) The 61 auto
mobiles remaining in the third an
nual Pan-American road race
headed Friday for Leon, some 276
miles from this city, with Viovanni
Bracco of Italy showing the way
to the drivers of sports cars and
Chuck Stevenson of Lynwood,
Calif., in the van of the stock car
pilots.
Bracco, driving a 1952 Ferrari,
rolled into the Mexican capital
Thursday with an elapsed time of
7:44.31 for the first three laps cov
ering 671 miles of the 1,934 mile
course ending at Juarez.
The Italian driver took over the
lead after France's Jean Behra,
the first day's pace setter, smashed
up on a treacherous curve 50 miles
from Puebla. .
The stock car division, largely
of drivers and automobiles from
the United States, remained a nip-and-tuck
affair with only 37 sec
onds separating the first three.
The four leaders are driving Lin
coins. ' '
Stevenson chalked up an 8:42.22
clocking in the two days for a 20
second advantage over Walter
Faulkner of Long Beach. Calif.
Two Oregon drivers were still
in the running in the stock car
division. Herspel McGriff of Port
land, driving a 1952 Oldsmobile,
was in 13th place with a time of
9:03.51. Bob Christie of Grants
Pass held down the 37th position
with an elapsed time of 10:40.27.
Sola, Kayoed By Olson, Protest
Was Made 'Dopey' By Gas Fuir.os
SAN FRANCISCO Ml -Lee Sala,
knocked out in the second round
by Carl (Bobo) Olson, declared
Friday he was made "dopey by
gas fumes in my dressing room"
before Thursday night's topflight
middleweight bout.
Sala's manager. Bunny Buntaz.
telephoned the Associated Press
that he would lodge a protest with
both the California Boxing Mana
gers Association and the parent
He asserted the California Box
'n Commission should investigate
but didn't say he would file a pro
test with it.
Olson's victory in 2:12 of the
second round had established him
as foremost contender for Sugar
Ray Robinson's world middle
weight title. He and Sala, of Do
nora. Pa., were the two top chal
lengers. Buntag said both he and Sala
smelled gas In Sala's dressing
room before the fight, but a po
liceman and an auditorium era
ploye to whom he appealed said
they couidn t smeu ue fumes.
FLOOR FINISHING
EQUIPMENT
SANDERS WAX
POLISHERS, lare m4 Small
VACUUM CLEANERS
STEEL WOOL PADS
LINOLEUM ROLLERS
LANSING -OLIVER
TOOL RENTALS
47 1 SrsahtMt PhMt 1-4001
(OPEN SUNDAYS 10-12, 4-4
SUPPORT THE INDUSTRY THAT SUPPdRTS YOU!
O 16 Inch Planer Ends . O Saw Dust
O 16 Inch Peeler Cores
fj sm m I
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Hey! Hey!
Lester's can no longer
be com! dared Gift
Shop, but rather a Toy
and Hobby Shop. Les
hat ej complete supply
of toyi and hobby equip
ment, alio many, many.
ok novelties
FREE -
BALLOONS
Te All The Kiddies
Friday Saturday
Per your onvsnitfiee t
Christmas we ore traylnf
opart antil 4:30 pm Fri
day avantngs.
LESTER'S
Toy & Hobby Shop
3S
337 N. Jackson
JIW
Fights Last Night
By The Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO Carl "Bobo"
Olson', 163, Honolulu, knocked out
Lee Sala, 163, Oonora, Fa. 2.
HOLLYWOOD, Calif. Art Ar
agon, 146, Los Angeles, stopped
Bob Terrance, 148, Los Angeles,
10.
EDMONTON, Al.-Harold "Baby
Face" Jones, 137, Detroit, outpoint
ed Georgia Dunn, 134, Edmonton,
10.
WATERVILLE, Me. 'Claude
Fortin, 140, Montreal, outpointed
Willy Mays, 135, Boston, 8.
NEW YORK (Sunnyside Garden)
Carmine Fiore, 145, Brooklyn,
stopped Jackie O'Brien, 146, Me
riden, Conn. 7.
BtTTTHEPES ONLY ONE
0LDCWSSIC
ALL
STRAIGHT
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A MATCHLESS SlINO OP iTSAIOHT WHISKIES 14 PEOOF
CONTINENTAL DISTIltINO COEPOEATION PHILADELPHIA, PA
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IfHStfl.
CHUICI OP TWO ORIAT CAM in this
Ford F-l Pickupt Easier loading low 2-ft
floor-to-ground loaded height!
if if &m
if:
m si w wurwi tmpwtw mmmTi
It's a proven fact that 3 out of 4 Ford Pickups
run for less than 2 a mile!
Only Ford shows you nationwide truck run
ning cost figures! The Ford Truck Economy
Run Book shows hundreds of running costs
on Pickups covering gas, oil and service
(but not including fixed expenses, such as
license, insurance, depreciation, etc.). Come
in. Look up your kind of job. See how little
it can cost to run a Ford Pickup in your workl
OVER 7 CU. FT. MORI PAYLOAD SPACI and
carries a full H -ton load. Supported load capacity
of the Ford Pickup is a full 38.8 cu. ft., as com
pared to 31.6 cu. ft. in the next leading make!
Now tin fa Mo
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New power n tfc,
V-8 iWerl
ran SVM yo o
t,,0'c of V.8 or sxI
FORD TRUCKING COSTS LESSsS
TRUCKS LAST LONOIRI
rolttTBtlM data m l,0M,00e trw(Uf
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Rose & Oak St.
Lockwood Motors, Inc.
Phone 3-4486