By RON G EMM ELL From the trend of sports events orer the last month, about the best odds-on wager a guy could ! make on the Schmellng-Louls brawl is that it wouldn't come off June 22 as scheduled at all. WAlle I have a personal convic tion that the Brown Bomber is going to emear Schmeling, 1 1 wouldn't lay you a plugged nickel on it. Whereas. I would be sorely tempted to post 7 to 5 odds that the two will never battle June 22. Simply, and albeit unreasonably, because It seems to be the popular fad or craze to schedule a big! sports event and then call it off. Started With "Scratch:':' The list of sports date thai been broken lately, if. p-aed end to end. would he a I mot as long as a piece of rope. Not quite. Long enough to give a number of sports enthusiasts headache, at any mle. It all started with Stagehand b ing scratched from the Derby, after a build-up that had the boys putting their long green on the nag's nose in the winter nooks. Which was as ,$ood as burying as deeply in the relt-ir as are the Phillies. Next, gcMing - more to ! r nie, the Midnight llell-Jark Itibbard fight here was called off. However, no one lost either dough or sleep over that cancellation, most everyone figured that it was a lucky break for Hibbaia. Fights too Close. Then, War Admiral ane" Sea biscuit were to have run what was supposed to have been the J greatest match race in Petter than a decade. Trainloada of western folks were all ,:.t to travel eastward to witness the epochal mlle-and-fc,-quarter gal- lop between the son and grand- son of the mighty Man o W ar. The call-off left a lot of rople wunoui anyining 10 a mai aay. Repercussions from that ladn't fully subsided until the Ross- Armstrong duel had to he post - joncd, bringing it that much closer to the Louls-bchn.eling title tiff. "Which made it bad, for New York . portdoru In gen- eral and Promoter Mike Jacobs In particular were lamenting-tne fact that the two big fights were coming so closely together Next, Just the other day. War Admiral was scraicnea irora ine &uDuroau nanutcap i ueimom aner 000 rans naa paaa tneir way in 1 But thmt seeming "break" ac to see the son of Big Red run-1 tnallv was the turninsr notnt of r or mai mue cai-on me ww Chester Racing association ana Samuel Riddle, owner ot Man War. are both under fire from the New York Racing commission. fans and sports writers. Stop Wrong Events. And, says Dodo, the heck of It is. they don't call off the right things. . Now. says he, if-they had. called off tht In dianapolis speedway affa'r who mould have cared? Or all two track races. Or these sooty marathons that some raid beaned guy with legs like cbop ' sticks always wins. "Fence BalV Found. An UPi story tells how the Bend Elks of the -State league won a ball game from Klamath Falls Memorial day. 22-7. blasting out six home runs and claiming a home- run record. "Mnrager Dutch Oackes" says the story, "removed Pitcher Hogan and took the mound himself after the first long blow. He quit aftr three pitches each one was Lotted vr th fence." lie must have been dishing up that celebrated "fence ball" . that slugger nave been trying to find sine- time immemorial. Word Wallops. (fare you ever noticed thr.t athletes, as whole, Jon't beat around the bush any when they have something to say? They put It out as straight otf the ton sue when speaking as they do from the shoulder on the athletic field. At least, that is the ' way It seemed when the Salem high "S" club held its annual banquet last night. Outgoing president I rrell Hanbrook, as toastm.ter, didn't mince words when Irtro durtlng the speaker.. To Has hrook. Coach Gilmore was "Itide-'em-Hard" Gilmore and Coach Hauk was "Crack-the-WhipHaok. The same Roe for ex-athletes, for Exes Gaier, Wolf, Kerne and "Jlimy' Nelson all fired oointblank and at close range. And, it was all taken Just like it waa sent, fluih on the chin and vt'th.a Miiile. It's the stuff. League Standings COAST LEAGUE (Before night games) W. L. Sacramento ......35 26 San Francisco .... 3 3 27 San Diego ....... 33 28 Portland ..... ...2 Seattle ......30 31 Los Angeles 31 Hollywood 28 3- Oakland 22 35 Pet .574 .550 .541 .533 .492 .433 .467 .361 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pet, Cleveland .. New York . . Washington Boston . Detroit . . . Philadelphia Chicago .. St. Louis ......24 20 12 14 18 IS 19 20 18 23 .667 WW ..22 ..19 ..17 ..14 ..12 ..11 .472 .412 4 0 0 - NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. New York " Chicago Boston " Cincinnati 18 Pittsburgh ..." II St. Lonls " 2? Brooklyn . Philadelphia .....II " Pet, .694 .615 .563 .500 .486 .412 .3591 .34.41 WESTERN IVTL LEAGUTJ Bolltagham 8. Yakima 2. Tacoma t. Vaneourer 1. 8pokaJa 4. WaBattCW 1. Lasts to End; Will Quit Sensational Coast Negro' Hurdles'one Division; Wears Foe Doivn By ALAN GOULD MADISON SQUARE GARDEN BOWL, New York. May 11.-F-Dusky, dynamic and destructive Henry Armstrong, greatest little fighting man of his time, wrote a new chapter in ring history t.v nighi. by giving a savage beating to Barney Ross and capturing the world welterweight championship. The sensational negro from Los Angeles, already holder of tho world featherweight or 126-pound title, achieved . unprecedented fistie heights by hurdling on-j class completely to lift the 147 pound crown from the battered head o the gallant little Chl- cagoan. Rcss lasted the full 15 rounds. surviving terrible punishnvat without once going down, but he was so badly beaten that the unanimous d e c i s i o n in Arm strong's favor at the finish was a mere formality and was received in semi-silence by a crowd of 28,290 onlookers. Last Fight for Ross -Only his courage And fighting instinct saved Ross from a knock out. Twice; he . refused the pleas of his handlers to let them stop the fight. Once, with only ;hrce (rounds to go, he shook his head negatively when Referee Donrv van suggested the possibility of halting the one-sided match. But when he got to his dressing room I Barney promptly announced he 1 bad fought the last llgnt of a I career that saw him scale world lightweight honors as well as :he weiter heights. For six (rounds Ross made it close and exciting. On the A soclated Press scorecard the Chi carom rained three of the first gjx rounds-the first, fourth and fifth. He was actually , in front wnen. despite absorbing a heavy battering, he was awarded the seventh round on a penalty, tha reBait 0f a iow punch by Arm strong. I the match.' From there on Arm strong, crowding and clouting. constant!? ! nressi punching, converted th fight Into a route. Homicide Henry coulda t bring his rival down no matter how hard he tried but he won he last eight i rounds so decisively that there ! remained no doubt of the outcome. Refuses to Quit Ross, aided by smelling salts as well as his opponent's ultimata arm weariness, mustered the courage to stand up under fearful I punishment to the final bell, but he was a sorry sight. Barney fought the last eight rounds with his right eye closed, the who'.e side ot his face puffed, his nose and mouth bleeding profusely and his left side a raw mass of welts. Once, in the twelfth. It looked as though the champion could I not possibly go the route. His knees buckled and he bent double,- folding Tils arms around his head after taking a series of smashing right hands to the side of the head- Barney's one open eye was glassy. But he managed to '-eep bis feet and rejected any idea of J quitting as he 8 a g g e d 'in his corner. I Ross was so consistently in re- treat and on the ' defensive throughout the last half of - the bout, counter-punching only in short spurts, that credence was given to ringside reports that the champion I had damaged both hands early in the fight. Ross stoutly denied this, nor did he claim any alibi, after it was all over, but It was a fact that Bar ney was outpunched, at least 20 to 1, during the last eight rounds. Ross best rounds were the fourth aad fifth. In both he jarred Armstrong with hard shot3 to the head. Armstrong" spotted Ross nearly nine pounds, so -ling 1334 to the champion's 142, but this did not appear to be the slightest handi cap. Promoter Mike Jacobs an nounced 1 the gross attendance was 28,290 of which 26,430 were paying customers. Gross receipts were 160, 860. 64 and net re ceipts after deduction of taxes were $136,015.58. Pascli Held Gnch To Capture Derby EPSOM, Eng.. May 31-Pr-The carnival 1 of England's Epsom's historic derby, will berun and won tomorrow by H. E. Morriss' Pasch if the experts are right. With colossal confidence and a fine disregard for history, they hare decided Pasch is a cinch. The Stewards, they insist, merely are running the race because the king and some 400,000 of his sub jects cant break the habit of go ing to It.! Rain Hrnitioit . Anvna (n. n,Kht nd lengthened the odds on over. S L Josenli's and w . A . I j-m i . serve-Kites Win Last night' Industrial league 1 Softball tilts saw St. Joseph's 1 trounce the Paper Mill 10 to 2 l and Serve-Rite rout Building Sup- Ply 6 to 1. St. Joseph .10 t Paper Mill 2 1 Moses sand Eberly; Cox and Armstrong. Serve-B.Ite ... . 1 Building Supoly 1 6 2 Mhrkesham and rerguson; BJLUaej and Walker. Ross C ; l ! :- Gehrig Plays 2000th Game 1 i Yanks Celebrate by 12 to 5 Win; Lou; Lets Mates Shine With Stick NEW YORK, May 31.-;P)-Iron Hoss Lou Gehrig galloped past the 2,000 consecutive-game mark in the greatest endurance record in sports today and the Yankees celebrated with a lop-sided 12 to 5 victory over Boston's staggering Red Sox. i 1 ; Every regular In the Yankee lineup hit at least once ' In the 1 6-hit attack the world cham pions fired at three Sox hurlera, but 'the player who took the smallest active part in the cele bration was Lou himself. Tommy Henrich hit his nlxth homer: Bill Dickey contributed his fifth; Red Rolfe lined his second into the right field stand3, and Billy Knickerbocker belted out a triple, double and two singles in the Yankee attack. Meantime, all Lou was able to do was connect for a fluke single that bounced past second ! base in the eighth Inning. - f .: ; No Weakness Yet Lou accepted today's 2,000th milestone in his record as a take off point to what he hopes will be an amazing run of 2.500 straight games played without a break. He began the string as a hursy young fellow with a pair of "piano legs" back In 1925, and now at 34. he doesn't see any signs of the run being broken. Long since, he has passed the previous consecutive-game mark of 1,307 set by Deacon Scott be fore Iron' Hoss Lou appeared on the scene. Although he wasn't the big man. with the war club today, he played a flawless game j around first base. ; ; ; : Boston . . ... S i 5 4 New York .12 j 16 1 Marcum, Ostermueller, -3Ick- man and Desautels; Beggs, Mur phy and Dickey. Crown Shifts g iwi mil I -- - f if if' ;":..A: v as- i 1 I , V Above, Henry Armstrong, feather weight champion who Ignored the lightweight class and cap tured the welterweight flgbt . crown from the jrreat bat ag lng Barney Ross, pictured be low, Tnevday Bight. UN Pho tos, - - : i -r w Roberts Finishes First in Indianapolis Race ri?' S:':; -; , 1 V;se'.-?v " . "-"a-- ?-. '" . v ' -:- :S Winning the twenty-sixth annual antomoblle classic at Indianapolis, Ind at an average speed of 117.200 miles per hour, a new track record, Floyd Roberts, of Van Nays, Calif., Is shown here getting the checkered flag at the finish of the big race. Wilbur Shaw of Indianapolis was second and Chet Miller of Detroit finished third. International Illustrated News soundphotO. . Hiltibrand Shoots 126 Birds in Row Salem Gunner Aims for Wire Meet; Townsend, Wain Break 50's C. G. Hiltibrand, Sunday at the Salem Trapshooters club traps, powdered 126 birds without a miss to - give warning that he would be at least one of the eli gible 28, gunners who will Thurs day night shortly after 6 o'clock Tie for the three prizes that are up for high gun in the state tele graphic shoot. Kehne Wain and Clarence Townsend kept pace with Hilti brand. breaking 50 straight in the 50-targets firing. Thursday night's prize shoot will be a 50 target handicap event. Sunday's results: 100-targets C. G. Hiltibrand. 100 (went on to break 126); Dean Glrar 96; Bert Jones 95;' Lyle Storey 92; W. D. Carter 90; George Hurley 83. 50-targets Kehne Wain and C. Townsend 50; I. Mosher 47; C. S. Bowne, W, H. Wolf and R. Welty 46; F. Mosher and Gordon Hull 43; Bob Sears 37. 25 targets George viesko 25. Deciding Game of Collegians Friday NORTHERN DIVISION W. L. Pet. 10 5 .667 .10 6 .625 9 7 .563 6 8 .429 .. 4 11 .267 Wash. State . Oregon State Oregon' . Idaho Washington . MOSCOW, Idaho, May Z1.-(JP- Cracking out three home runs la a 14-hit attack, the University of Idaho Vandals defeated the Wash ington Huskies, 12 to 7, in the final home baseball game of the northern division Pacific Coast conference season. Bill Kramer, all-around Vandal senior athletic star, cracked a home run in his last time at bat before the home town crowd. PULLMAN, May 3 l-;p)-Wa3h- ington State Cougars will tmeet the University of Idaho here Thursday In the baseball game which will give the,. Cougars the northern division coast confer ence championship or throw them Into a tie with Oregon State col lege. Crescent City Hurler Pitches No-Hit Game MEDFORD, May 31-(P)- Mike Koll, University of California freshman, hurled Crescent City, Calif., to a 15 to 0 no-hit victory over Ashland yesterday. He struck ont 20 batters. 'Family Day U Held By Josephine Court GRANTS PASS, May Zl-(JP)-lt was a family affair In the jostle court today. Ord Maurice Pritch- ett,20, of Klamath Falls was fined $50 fo rreckless driving. His sis ter, Nadlne Carman BechteL 26, paid a fine of $150 on a charge of driving while intoxicated. Heights Meet Postponed SALEM HEIGHTS The social sewing division of the Woman's club meeting has been postponed from today until next Wednes day, owing to the illness ci the hostess, Mrs. A. la. Chapman. Salem, Oregon, Wednesday Morning, June r ... x-x ; Square Deal Wins League Tilt 15-0 Square Deal last night lashed three 20-30 f lingers for 14 hits and walked off with a 15 to 0 Spring league softball victory. R. Gentzkow cowtailed , one for four bases off Pitcher Smither in the first frame ' with two mates aboard. Square Deal . . 15 II '4 20-30 0 7 o H. Singer and L. Singer; Smither, Drynan, Hendrie and Comstock. Woodburn Juniors Win Opener 3-2 Bright Allows but 6 Hits; Legion Nine Uses 3 Pitchers WOODBURN The Wor dburn American Legion junior baseball team won Its 'opening game of the season when it defeated a team of - Salem and Woodburn stars 3-3 in a nip and tuck game at Legion park here Monday aft ernoon. " LeRoy Bright, Salem high star. held the Junior team to f'.x hits but they came at the cruc'.al mo ment while three Woodburn burl ers were touched for 7 bingles but were able to scatter them well. The Salem team drew first blood when Elaud walked and scored all the way from first base when Bright smashed the first pitch to him for a double against the centerfield fence. The Legion team took the lead in the sixth with' two runs but Father Dels' team knotted the count, in the seventh whn Whit man doubled and scored on a sin gle by Eland. Woodburn scored the winning run in the ilgntn when DeJardin walked, acvnced to second on & single by Reed and scored when Hatcher sent a screaming single to left field. Dick Whitman, star of the Woodburn high school team and also of the Woodbnrn Firemen, caught the last 5 innings for the Salem team. Besides turniug in a creditable game behind the plate, he cracked out a single and a double in two times up. Woodburn ..........3 6 2 Salem All-Stars .... .2 7 1 Hanauska, Miles, , Jell 'and Reed: Bright and Dels Whitman. Umpires, Felix SSonetznl behind the plate; .Elbuin Sims on bases. Vikings "S" Club Banquet Is Held Forty-six members of the Sa lem high school lettermen's or ganization, the 'S" club. Super intendent Silas Gatser, Principal Fred Wolf, Dean "Jimmy" Nel son. Athletic Director Vera Gil more, Coach Harold Hauk and a number of guests met last night in the high school cafeteria tpr the annual "S" club banquet. Darrell Hasbrook, outgoing president of the organization, was toastmaster, calling on each of the foregoing guests for messages. All speakers were unanimous in their praise of the. accomplishments of the "S" club, not only in the field of athletics, but as an integral part and leader of school activi ties. - - Stuart "Boomer Butch" Nel son, incoming president, congra tulated Hasbrook on the showing the club has made under his lead ership and told the members that 1C was his ambition to expand ac- wa hm auivtvivu sw 4h4ea-Mij ' - . ; m tlvlty of the organization during! ut tbereon June 22, but It is doubtful IT Joe wfll get sneh a "cheer the coming rear. I ful little emrfuT when they clamber Into the ring. W elierweighi .. " ' - - - tatesman 1, 1938 n Early Homer Aids Padres to Victory Solons Nosed out 2 to 1 in Opener; Babich Stops Oaks, Four Blows SAN DIEGO. Calif.. May Zl-UPi Little Dominic Dalles.tEdro's first Inning homer, scoring Al Niemiec, enabled the San' Diego Padres to score a 2 to 1 victory over the coast league leading Sac ramento Senators in the series opener here today. Husky Jim Chaplin registered his tenth 1938 win in sliading Tony Freitas, little southpaw. usually a Padre jinx. Sacramento ........ 1 6 1 San Diego 2 4 0 Freitas and Grube; Chaplin and Hogan. Babich Is Hot LOS ANGELES. May Z1(JP) Hollywood subdued Oakland to night, 6 to 3, behind v the four hit pitching of Johnny Babich Abreu's homer in the fourth with Montague on base, and Nor man s error on Bolyard's" smash to the outfield that enabled Mon tague .to score from first, were the only offensive thrusts by the cellar occupants. Norman slam med one of Southpaw Shechan's slants over the left field wall in the sixth. Oakland ...........3 4 0 Hollywood. ... ......6 6 2 Sheehan and Raimondi; Babich and Brenzel. Jason Lee Beats Knight Memorial Jason Lee eked out a 10 to 9 victory over Knight Memorial in a Senior Church league soft ball game last night. Jason Lee ......... 10 9 3 K. Memorial ... 9 7 3 Lee and Clark; Eaton and Evans. i Cheerful Little J? ; . . - t A A i - - ' i ' .? V - - i h - : -v s - ' f . I ,v -. ' ' ' . y ' . -n - - v 7 ' :" : 9 Max Schmellng may have whispered "sweet nothings tn the ear of Joe Limits When the met In Mew York to sirn officially for their PAGE SEVEN Wagner Keeps His Mat Title Beany Dean, Loser, Fights Real Fist Battle With Arbiter A. Szasz Though George Wagner suc cessfully defended his Pacific coast middleweight belt last night in Salem's agony chamber, the. success led to a knockdown-drag- out brawl between his opponent, Beany Dean, and Arbiter Al Szasz as the pair were en route to the dressing rooms. ; Szasz, irked throughout the ti tle bout because Dean would not desist from his- unethical tactics, further angered when Dean missed Wagner with a flying dropkick that took him in the mid section and laid him low, and ful ly aroused when Dean persisted in baiting ringsiders instead of going straight to the dressing room, let drive with a right that found Its mark and the battle was on. As the crowd surged around the two wild-eyed matmen, Ser geant Jack Cutler finally wedged his way through and with the as sistance of Gust Johnson, ' pried the pair apart and escort them basementward. " ' Then Trouble Starts An American Legion o 1 1 1 cer counted Dean out as Szasz lay ctretched in agony under the ropes at the conclusion ot the bout. When finally assisted to his feet, Szasz lifted Wagner's arm aloft. That was a signal for Dean to clean house on both Szasz and Wagner, but he didn't get far un til Szasz opened up with both hands to put Dean on the mat. Then, as they started to the dres sing rooms, arguing as they went, the brawl really got under way. Dean took the first fall with a variety of animosity-arousing vil lainy, culminated, by a body slam. Wagner took, the second with a straight punt to Dean's chin and an Indian deathlock. Pete Sherman, was too much man for Gust Johnson in the mid dle number, pinning him in two straight. The opener, between Jimmy Hef fner and Harry Elliott, went to a time limit draw with Heffner taking the first fall with a jugular strangle and Elliott the second w f i a press. Free YMCA Swims Start Tomorrow Free swims for all Salem school children, in the YMCA pool, be ginning tomorrow! Periods are divided according to schools, with the schedule end ing June 10. Boys will have the tank on Thursday and Saturday of this week, and Monday, Wed nesday and Thursday of next. Girls'- days are on Friday of this week and Tuesday and Friday of next. The schedule: . V . 1:30 to 2:15 Garfield, Wash ington and Bush. 2:20 to 3:05 McKinley, Sa cred Heart and Grant. 3:10 to 3: 55 Richmond, High land and Englewood. - 4:00 to 4:45 Parrish, Leslie and senior highs. Walter Henningsen Is Senior Golf Champion PORTLAND, May 31-P)-A 3 and 2 victory over J. C. Henkle of Lake Oswego gave Walter Hen ningsen, Waverly Golf club, the Oregon senior golf title at Gear hart yesterday. Earful for Joe? Tide Walter Hagen Out, big Show Surprises Mark National Open Qualifying; low Score at Seattle (By the Associated Press) Walter Hagen failed to qualify for the open yesterday and that just about tells the tale of heart breaks and surprises that annu ally mark the sectional qualifying t-Tts for America's biggest golf tournament. Hagen,- twice national cham pion, four-times winner of the British open crown, had a 36 hole total of 151 on rounds of '8-73 at San Francisco. That left him six strokes behind his travel ing companion on a world tour from 'which he had pust returned, Joe Kirk wood. Joe was the high est scoring qualifier in that dis-. trict as. -Mark Fry of Oakland, Calif., set the pae with a Eub par 74-6 5 13 9. A lot of other top-flight golf ers, some of them only a -little less "famous than Hagen. failed to make the grade. Craig Wood, runner-up . in the British open a few years ago, Jess Sweetser. first American to win the British amateur - crown. Wiffy Cox and Leo Walper of Washington. Gene Kunes.-Judd Brumley, Chich Har bert. Ted Luther, O'Hara Watts. Fred Haas, sr., father of the Walker cup player, Walter Btev ins, were among the missing when' the returns came in. - Scoring honors in the qualify ing rounds went to the' west, where there was an unusually large turnout due to the proxim ity of the big tourney. -- Weetland Low, 137 'At Seattle Jack Westland, for mer Chicago amateur, fired 69 68 137, nine under par, to lead a small but select field and take the day's scoring honors. Three players .carded 13S's for the 3 6 holes. At Los Angeles, big Olin Dutra, open champion in 1934, and Charles Lacey tied. Dutra carded 699-69 138i probably a record for consistency, and Lacey had 70-68 138. . Francis Schneider, Oklahoma City pro, carded 65-73 at Oklahoma City to share the top. Chicago shared in the day's low scoring when Horton Smith card ed 89-70 139, topping the sec ond biggest field at any of the qualifying centers. PORTLAND, May 31-;p)-The golfing Zimmerman brothers set the pace today for Portland's sec tional qualifying round for the national open tournament at Den ver. Emory Zimmerman carded C S 74142 while Al Zimmerman made 72-70 14 2. OJther profes sionals to qualify were Ted Long-worth.-with 74-70 f44, and Joe Mozel with 73-72145. Amateurs who qualified were Don Moe, 72-75 147. and Dr. Cliff Baker, 71-76 147. - Paul Dean Seems Fully Washed up HOUSTON, Tex.. May 31-(;F)-Paul Dean has reached the end of baseball's comeback trail so far as Houston Buff officials are con cerned. The big righthander was returned to the St. Louis Cardin als today when he left the team at Shreveport and headed for Dallas to board a plane for St. Louis. He will have a conference with Branch Rickey, St. Louis official, tomorrow. The Cardinals optioned Dean to the Buffs at the start of the season, hoping he would regain winning form, but Dean ran into a lot of trouble his last couple of "outs." Speed Limit Upon Santiam Proposed The county court movtd to ward reducing 'ravel sne- over the. narrow, crooked Niagara-Detroit section of the North Sa. tiara highway yesterday after hearing a warning from County Engineer K. C. Hubbs that unless su-.ps to slow up -traffic were taken seri ous accidents would result. Hubbs said 60 cars aa hour were counted Memorial day pa&s- lng through Ds'.roit. Motorists unfamiliar with the highway, he said, fail to realize that jn leav ing Detroit, they have reached the end of the excellent-high road section and are entering the gorge bottleneck. The result is traveling speeds that are mdan gering life. v The engineer recommentVd re duction of the speed limit from 25 to 15 miles per hout and stationing of pilots at either end of the gorge -section to enforce one-way traffic on days when travel is exceptionally heavy. The court directed him to confer with state highway officials. Hauser Studying ICC At Capital Prior to Leading Motor Bureau Herbert Hauser, for 20 years an employe of the Oregon rnbllc service and state utility cr n mis sions and who was recently ap pointed district supervisor of the bureau ot motor carriers ot the interstate commerce cemm'ssion,, has gone to Washington, D. C. to take a course of instruction under the ICC before assuming his new duties. Upon return to Oregon, he will hare headquarters in Port land. 1 I .5