The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, June 21, 1951, Page 7, Image 7

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    Pacific Teams Assume Hollywood Air
My TIM AlMcUtetf PrM
If baseball ever assumed a
Hollywood motif, play last nijtht in
the Western International league
would earn Oscars for the bat, the
arm, and the unearned.
The bat would be catcher Bill
Brenner of the Yakima Bears who
drove in seven runs as Yakima de
feated Wenatchee -l at Yakima.
Brenner drove in three runs in
the third witn a long single and
chased four more across in the
seventh with a bases-loaded home
run
Cast as the arm wuld b Jim
Holder of Spokane who hurled the
Spokane Indians to a 7 to 1 vie
torv over Vancouver at Vancouver.
The decision gave Holder a spot
less 80 slate and left Spokane
i'-j games behind Vancouver. 1
The unearned was enacted at
Tacoma where the Tacoma Tigers
scored seven unearned runs to de
teat the Tri-City Braves 7 to 3. Hal
Scherting helped Tacoma along
with an inside-the-park home run.
At Victoria, the Salem Sen
a'ors scored two runs in the 11th
; inning to edge Victoria Athletics
4 in z ine winning tallies came
nn singles by Dick Faber, Dick
Xlvers and Pete Tedeschi'a plus
Dick Bartle's outfield fly.
New Record Might Be Set
On RunOf Spring Salmon
WINS HONORS
PORTLAND .P-John Lang
ford, of Portland, posted a 13-under-par
275 for 72 holes yester
day for top honors in the Oregon
Open Golf tournament at nearby
Milwaukie.
Bob Duden of Portland, was sec
ond with 276. followed by Glenn
Spivy with 279. Chuck Congdon of
Tacoma was fourth with 280.
Sam Urzetta, National Amateur
Golf champion, was a star basket
ball player for St. Bonaventure
University.
It..
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. am m
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I 1 M. .llg.
SUTHERLIN. Central and Statt
ROSEBURG, 120 West Oak
Phone 2988
Dial 3-7011
The run of sprint chinook sal
mon in the North Umpqua river
continues well ahead of the 1946
parent run and is showing possi
bility of matching the record year
of 1947.
Bill Pitney, resident biologist for
the State Game commission, re
ports the run has held up well dur
ing the first two weeks of June.
The Umpqua river survey was
started in 1946. In that year the
total run was 1.974 fish, with 1.7no
counted by June IS. During the
first two weeks of June, 35 sal
mon were tallied at the counting
station. The 1.700 fish counted for
the season through June 15, 1946,
represented 86.1 percent of total
run.
This year 393 salmon went over
the counting station board between
June 1 and June 15 to bring the
current total to 2.460. Fist) now in
the river were spawned by the 1946
run.
In 1947 only 142 fish appeared
during the first half of June, as
compared with 393 this year. But
the count by June 15 was 2.477
fish, representing 82.7 percent of
the total m i g r a t 1 o n of 2,994
Record Passible
As this year's count Is only 17
fish behind the 1947 figures for the
same date, possibility is seen that
the record 1947 total may be
passed, if the percentage should
remain favorable.
The June 15 count in 1948. was
only 75.4 percent of total run, Pitney
points out, while the ratio in I9.i0
was 74.1 percent. On the other
nana, w.i percent oi toiai run naa
passed the counting station by
June 15 in 1949. Total migration
in previous years included 2.245 in
1948, 2.109 in 1949 and 2.044 in 1950.
The coun on jack salmon shows
544 to June 15 this year as com
pared with ITS for the same date
in 1946, 662 in 1947, 189 in 1948. 454
in 1949 and 213 in 1950. Percentage
of jack salmon migration as com
pared with the annual total com
pare very closely to the ratio given
for adults, except in the year 1946
when the June IS count waa only
63 percent of the 533 total.
Summer steelhead tallies this
season are the highest for June 15
since the river study started.
The summer run is considered
to start June 1, Pitney reports.
While there is some overlapping
from winter-run fish, arbitrary
dates give a fairly accurate check
on each species.
Summer steelheads counted to
June 15 this year number 335, as
compared with 331 in 1946 for 9.8
percent of the 3,361 total: 200 in
1947, 4.3 percent of 5.113; 159 in
1948. 5.8 percent of 3.762; 136 in
19-19, 8.1 percent of 1.672. and 131 in
1950, 4 6 percent of 2.835.
Boeing Aims At Making
B-52 Chief Jet Bomber
SEATTLE P) Boeing is
aiming at making its B-52 jet
bomber "the chief strategic
bomber of our nation."
William M. Allen, Boeing presi
dent, told the Seattle chamber of
commerce that the secret H-52 will
have eight jet engines and will be
i capable-of intercontinental bomb
1 ing.
He indicated he expects the B-52
to supplant the B 36 as the nation'a
best long range bomber, but
added:
"There is competition for the B
52 in the form of a swept-wing
version of the B-36. It is our job
to see that the B-52 is a substan
' tially superior article."
L tr ' nsssttiBMt' v Tr v
HOMERS IN CUPID'S LEAGUE Ralph Kiner, Pittsburgh's horn
run swatfer, and Nancy Chaffee, California tennis iter, wear
happy smiles in New York restaurant where they announced
their engagement at a private party. They indicated they will wed
attar the end of the major league season. Nancy goes to London
where the will compete in the Wimbledon tennis championships.
IAP Wirephotol
Boeing is now building two ex
perimental models of the B-52 here.
ireot D3evj Tastfe
Sacks' SeSesi BeerS
Just three months ago, we invited you to try the New Tote
of Sicks' Select Beer.
Many of you people did . . . and you keep coming back for more! In fact,
the results have been sensational, far beyond our own
confident predictions.
We've named our New Taste Brew 66
and, as you can guess by now, it's here to stay.
If you haven't done so already, we suggest you try this
New Taste Brew 66. Then you'll see right away why so many people
are turning to Sicks' Select Beer.
LISTEN TO GUY LOMBARDO
KRNR 8:00 FRIDAYS
o
5)
pi M
O
SICItS' rSTWINO COMMWT
IA1IM. Of I SON
Pelton Dam Opposed
By Interior Secretary
PORTLAND J Oscar L.
Chapman, secretary of. the Inte
rior, has lined up with Oregon
sportsmen and fish interests in
opposition to the proposed Pelton
dam.
Chapman recommended that the
Federal Power commission deny
Portland General Electric com
pany a license to build the hydro
electric project.
PGE wants to build the $22,000,
000 project on the Deschutes river
north of Madras.
Chapman's letter said "construc
tion of Pelton dam would be
highly detrimental to the present
fishery resource." Of even greater
significance, he said, was the po
tential loss of fish production in
the proposed Columbia river fish
eries (levelopment program.
Thurs June 21, 151 The News-Review, leseettrtj, Ore, 7
Eugene Sailor Saves
2 Children From Death
ASTORIA P A young sailor
from Eugene aaved two children
from drowning in the chilling Co
lumbia river here.
This was the way police reported
the story:
Robert E. Young. 25, Tongue
Point sailor whose home is in Eu
gene, ran to the river when his
wife heard screams and saw two
children clinging to piling some
300 yards out in the river.
Young stripped off his jeans,
pushed a log Into the river, and
swam with it to the children, Jim
Alvin, 14, and his sister Martha
Alvin, 12. Young then helped the
children cling to the log until
gillnetter, whose name waa not
learned, came alongside and
picked them up.
The children, police reported,
could not swim. They vere dumped
into the water when their skiff
upset. Taken home, they were un
harmed. Young, a former University of
Oregon student, waa a naval reservist.
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