Newspaper Page Text
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R. S. L*e In
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is sixth place in
m «n Fba| Six standings losses. They with
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c J outers are
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Griffin ilne
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IN
NEWS
ITT MELTON
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dally except Sunday at
Solomon street, Griffin,
am ss second the post slgjg office matter. at
m In Dally News wlU not to
an error in advertising
■ ie cost of the advertise
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hath them still in re
u«e, and H bumbled in me.
—^Lamentations S:*8.
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back ■ t£;■$¥'•
see was in ’town (he
, fle*a a button salesman
ie was around to get an
n ^ Sam Abernathy’s gen
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on how well and
• . M look^, looked health mimine, »nd and Siren Slim but smyu. » v the «.
yes to look spruce to give
tol a good name.”
policy, that! Like the
with their program of Self
Mi. They want taverns sell-
I ' Copyright 1948, United State* Brewers Foundation
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LAY-AWAY PLAN
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CRUISE* RISES 9 |
$ Men's W Women 1 49.95 Q ■
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The la teat to dwdgn toe fln.it m de luxe H
aqul pmen t . . . Ae beet ... tor trouble-free, effort- 9
torn ridtog. Balloon tenure, Firestone HiKpred I
taBoon tires and tube*
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mrmm E N OUR STORE—TIL CHRISTMAS nmrYii i n~
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ION STREET
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2, 1948. ' ' ' '■■*!-
danagerous passer. Other standouts
in the baekfield include Allen Lee,
Bud Duncan and Delmas Whitten.
Bethel Ingram will be the player
to watch in Lee’s T baekfield. He
will operate the team from his all
important quarterback position. Bud
o uncan Alton Treadway will
run f rom the halfback slots,
Although R. E. Lee ha* lost most
of their games this season they can
net be counted out, as they proved
last year when they knocked Grif
fin from the championship. They
always have proved hard on the
top-notch teams even though they
lose to the smaller clubs.
The Rebels ha’,,- a top passing
two some in Bethel Ingram and
A1Jf;n ^ Henry ’ Johnson at right
’
end probably will be cm the receiv
ing end of their tosses.
Harvard Hoodoo
Holds Over Brown
PROVIDENCE — (NEA) — Just
What hoodoo or magic Harvard
Brown nobody seems to
know, but the Bruins have been
able to win Just once in eight meet
ings in 10 years.
With six straight victories. Brown
figured to prevail thlg fall over an
in-and-out Cambridge team. The
Bruins were* favored.
But Jim Noonan threw two;
touch-down passes and Emil Drva
ric kicked a field teal in the last
half to give Harvard the decision,
30-19.
W0: Mtnbtmat
From where I sitJoe Marsh
.... ...... ................... .............. .. ....... —............. ......... —
i -..la wliil ,
' In Salesmatohip ...
ing beef to present a dean, orderly
appearance—ao they inspect them
regularly, and call on the proper
authorities to discipline ‘#^* anf that
mi * ht * !v * *** M
iuLTb^o^Lnces ^ ‘ And^theJ
® ol th *^
should want to see it presented in
clean, respectable surroundings.
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'CLASS a REGION « STANDINGS
Games All
Region Game
W L T 'W L T
LaGrange 4 O a 0
Decatur 4 wrn o SO .+4. 0
SPALDING 3 C9 o © Nl* o
GRIFFIN 3 tea to- t* am I
Gainesville 1 rt a- ® OO-. l
Thomaston 2 n o cq tO 0
Athens 0 eF o „ to 0
GAMES THIS WEEK
Griffin vs. R. E. Lee at Thomaston.
Thursday
Albany at ThomasviUe
Tifton at Fitzgerald
Valdosta at Waycroas
Marietta at Carterevtlle
Cedartown at Rockmart
Athens at Gainesville
^ HESULT8 _ jLAST __ WEEK
R - *• 18 — Baker Village 8
0MC B team 13 - Moultrie 7
R ' E ' ^ 19 “ B * ker Village 8
plt2serald 48 ~ Oordele 8
Carters vllle 44 — Athens 21
Decatur 13 - West Fulton 6
LkPi’ang* 4* — Newnan 9
8COBER8 CLASS ^
Roberts, Griffis, Hargrove, Burch. Parbtet, Colvin, B Howard, Dunn, Pbwem. Strickland. Hill, Mcpann, Harrison, Valdosta GRIFFIN Dalton Cartersville Tlftpn Cartersville Gainesville LaGrange cedkrtpwn Albany Fitzgerald Albany Waycross , * ,} 11 14 10 20 13 12 10 19 13 17 18 12 7 oS 22 34 S *3 3 >- -a 1 M CO »- 28ISS3?5S88S^
m
Athletes Star In
Cla«| Elections v
TUC8©N, Artz. - <NEA) — Iti
class elections, athletes In
fA*rts-football,i htoeball.
keftoa^khd presidential track—were elected
poslUffis.
►all was named senior president,
PasebaU captain Lowell Bailey was
named Junior president. Basket
J® was . S3 ,_____. named sophomore _____ president.
Doug Ward, who- will report foi
SSnJTSJS?' .___. esnnfflo presiaent .___
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'Chicago Bears’ quarterback Johnny Lujacle demonstrates his ability,
I to knit sweaters as well as scoring attacks. In Chicago hospital for
.Angeles a check-uprsof Rams, a the back T-format,on injury suffered ^er in is the making game,-with * sweater the Los for
V
IS
Final I HlO Hi ftJuAfll/
5 iHlo HCBR
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Here's the Class A high school
football s4utatlor*or^he last last
big week of the regular soeison.
The' winner of tie Albany-Tho
- i
Citation Better
Than
mu,
“ oy at n. f.
Newsfeatures Sports^EdiU* nu»\
V NEW YORK—It will tokq a
son can be formed between Cit
a tl3r>, the horr,- of the year, and
Man OWar. ' I I
Cluti0n U jUfil v. horses
a as
gc He 0S1 i y three years old and
vvon’t be four until January y 1, ’ the
y 0t , h0rsea
'
Many comparisons have been
made between Citation and Man
o- War. But t»6 best way to com
pare too two at-tola momo4| now
that Citation has finished his 3
year-old career, would be to say the
„vo colts measure fairiy .even as
ar as their victories are concerned.
Citation won eight out of nine
races as a Juvenile compared of 10. with^
Man O’ War’s nine out As a
3-year-old Citation took 17 decis
ions out of 18. Big R.-d 11 out of
a. Citation lias earned *830^60,
with Man O’ War’s $249,- ;
48S. But It must be remember*!
Big Red raced when $90,000
purses werc the exc.-pUon rather
the rdle.
At their respective careers, the re-1
cords show that Man O’ War was j
called on to carry more weight than (
Citation. As a 2-year-old, Big Red
won five times with 130 pounds on 1
his back and in his lone defeat to
jpset in toe Sanford Stakes at .
Saratoga, the Glen Riddle Farms’ j
colt carried 130 pounds to Upeet’s
119. Citotion has carried no such
weight, I
As a 3-year-old, Man O’ War won
with 131 pounds ln the Miller at
Saratoga, 135 in the Stuyvesant at
Jamaica and with 138 in the Pct
omac at Havre de Grace. Citation
toted no such weight, his heaviest
.burden during 1948 being 126
' pounds. Only In the Stars and
! Strlp.es at Arlington Park was he
asked to concede actual weight to |
horses. In that race he was
! rigged with 119 pounds Of Jockey
| (Eddie Arcaro) and equipment.
5 Weight will stop freight train,
a
as the race track adag- goes, and ;
it has stopped many a horse,
iuamg Man O’ War.
! After Big Red ended his
old career, owner Samuel D. Rid
die asked Walter 8. Vosburg, vet
rran New York handicapper, what
he would assign bis great
r~ never pulled - * his punches. ^ It was
his Job to weight down horses in
|rn,r,rr^c heat,
’’If he wins hi* first race as a
"*"* _
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mjttvill ci^ 6 game Thursday night will
the ' One champion
JSill p
,, wW-Iifton vie
wly settle the race In Region
tfee some for the
ereville game in
Region Four’s ..cha mpion Will be
decided in the 'game between La
Grange and Decatur, who tenta
lively have agreed to play in At
lanta Friday night.
All schedules will be completed
this week in preparation for the re
gional playoffs to begin early * n
December between various region
champions to decide Class A’s best
Thp The onW ow 0amps games last laK . weekend weekend
whJch affec ted regional standings
werc in t^ Fourth district of North
Georgia. n Spalding q ,j,- upset - ^ the pick
(except ***** Ho0plC) With ft
i 2 . 0 victory over Gainesville and
m OVe d from fourth to third place in
tandin*|.. ‘
s .
The ^ was curtailed
b y rain ^ .and spotty schedule making.
No were played ln
Gcorgla . s Region 0 ne, only single
eames in Reglon Two and mee .
... .. . .
R ^g ion Four had two other games
|,, audition in the Spalding upset.
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I will put the
weight on him ever carrieid by
said Vosburgh.
Rather than risk injury to
Riddle retired him to stud.
Man Q . War spen t 22 years in
tud. A total of 3*6 foals w#re sired
Man O’ War. Those that raced
won 172 stake races worth a total
of $1,776,520, until this year. Some
of Big Red’s sons and daughters
'still racing. That’s something
can’t be said for Citation until
pew champion gets to the stud
Calumet Farm.
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mmm ■
Saturday
ATLANTA -Iff)- The Souto
Conference waited until the
to decide who the champion
will be, as well as aoout every other
1948 football honor. • I
The coming weekend, which is
the last full slate of the season, is
by far the best of the year.
Since a victory ror the Georgia
Bulldogs over Georgia Tech will
mean the conference championship. 1
the game in Athens is the biggest
during a day of big games. |
Three other games push Tech
and Georgia for the spot looking
at the conference as a whole, j*
Mississippi defeats Mississippi State, j
the Rebels will at least take second!
place. If the Rebels win and
Georgia loses, however, Mississippi
Will win its second consecutive
Southeastern crown.
The Green Wave of Tulane can
not win the championship but it,
can become co-champion with
Georgia if the BuUdogs and Rebels
lose. Tulane meets L. S. U. In Ba
ton Rouge In Louisiana’s top game
of the season.
Vanderbilt—fastest finisher in
the conference—Is out of the race
because of early season loses to
Tech and Mississippi and a tie with
Alabama. The Commodores’ rec
ord during the last six games, how
^ h lmpresslvc enough to ^
them a bowl candidate.
Tennessee meets Vandy in Nash
ville in another interstate game,
Three other games round out the
week—Florida vs. Alabama In Tus
luburn, vs. unbeaten,
Clem son in Mobile, and
i Kentucky vs. Miami in Miami Fri
* -
Coach McCray Likes
Fullback Cloud
1 WILLIAMSBURG, Va. —(NBA)
, Hiere Is no question in the mind of
William and Mary mentor Rube
McCray as to the best fullback in
the Southern Conference.
„„„ ™ 1 ^ „
4 Cloud lost but ^ six ^ yards from f
Rcrin v 33a g e ^ seven games. Against
NortJl CAr y im )n ty ,, Ho.
£ Vfib'W*
... . j/
„ raTrvintr w_,. « Htn ” _ for
J7 4 yards, Cloud ranks .. second to .
cboo-Choo Justice in total Conftr
cnce w ith 36 points. He
completed . two out of three
passes, and Intercepted
three for a total return at Shards
«j us t what else is a fullback sup
.^i to do?’’ cries McCray. ,
--:- GoiTI - Ay©
Perfect « S
Up Six Times
MILWAUKEE
season a t this Ume the American
Howling Congress had recognized Sr*.
four jpo game s, six 298’s^four
^ ^
^ 2^ ranorted five 293’s
Thig £ ' for the er .
^ but it mights
credlt8d to thdmprovement of the
keglerr ,, ' the high quality «£*tor of the pins
. r cm resur
faclng materials and several othei
• -a>ons.
This is Sammy Baugh’s twelfth
season with the Washington Red
skins of toe National Football
League. ■i*j
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'<■ a ' >/’ -5K'
Si ■
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Spalding High School's 12 to 0
vict °ry over Gainesville Saturday
night put her in third place in the
Class A Region Four standings.
It was the Wolfpack's final game
and nobody but Griffin can oust the
Spalding outfit from third place.
LaGrange and Decatur lead the
resist and will play Friday night
Atlanta for the championship,
LaGrange has won nine and lost
one on the entire schedule. Decatur
1 ”* won four and lost one within
the region and has won eight and
tat one on the entire schedule.
Right behind in third place is the
Spalding Wolf pack with three re
^nal victories against two losses,
Spalding’s record for the season is
*** won aIKl * our lost - Spalding
finishe<1 her ****** of Grif -
fin.
Griffin is in fourth and will stay
trere unless she beats Thomaston
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fgtfwi
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"WINTERIZE SPECIAL”
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1. Complete Chassis Lubrication
2. Change OII—5 Quarts
3. Spray Springs
4. Change Rear Axle and Transmission ■
Lubricant *
5. Refill Shock Absorbers
6. Inflate Tires
7. Check Water in Battery .
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SEE YOUR FORD DEALER
RANDAL?. & BLAKELY. INC.
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—
week. The Gold Wave
won two, lost one and tied
within the region. If Grif
fin wins this week the record
be good enough to top Spald
ing for third—and if Griffin loses
the loss wouldn’t push her below
Gainesville because Gainesville has
won one, lost two and tied one with
in the region. So Griffin or Spald
ing will be third any way you
figure It. Griffin’s total record
so far is seven wdn, one lost
and one tied. Gainesville’s total is
six won, two lost and one tied.
Tbomaston is in sixth place with
only one regional victory against
three losses. Her total record is
three victories and six losses. Ath
ens is in a poor last place with no
regional victories but four regional
losses, her total record for the year
is three victories and six losses.