4 a Tfcsr CZIGCN STATZCMAXL Salem. Oregon. Friday Morning, l loy 21. 1S43 uruum LiiHiiiK)di(( r UfCWf llllfjrUVCU IUIIUIIIUIIV Si,TVUll Anglers iThis Weekend; Western Streams Appear Best Bets PORTLAND, Ore, May 2d-(P) Oregon fishermen will find an gling i conditions - improved this weekend, the state game : com mission's weekly bulletin indi cated Thursday. Reports by counties: Benton Limit catches of large trout being, taken from the Alsea river : on spinners and worms. Limits also from Wil lamette river near Irish Bend and Peoria. Lane Some nice catches have been made in the last few 'days from the McKenzie river and Middle Fork of the Willamette. linn Larger , streams drop ping and fishing should be im proved. , ; Iii 18 Frames Seals Outlast Acorns Again SAN FRANCISCO, May 20.-(P) -San Francisco defeated Oakland, S to 4, in another extra-inning Coast league baseball game here, Thursday. " -- Tied at 3 at the end of the third the twe San Francisco bay area rivals struggled throofh 14 scoreless innings be fore either could bring In a run. They both scored, umt the Oaks got only one, the Seals two. The Oaks took a one-run lead In the 18th when Les Scarsella doubled and Fern Bell drove him in with a single, r The Seals scored twice in their half on Bernard Uhalt's walk, a wild pitch. Bill Raimondi's error, George Metkovich's J three-bagger, deliberate walks to Henry Steinbacher and Gus Suhr, and Del Young's single. Ok. 003 000 000 000 000 001-4 17 -1 ST 003 000 000 000 000 002-S 14 4 Lotz,Kleinke (18) and B. Rai mondi; Gibson, Ballou (18) and Sprinz, Ogrodowski (8). How The v STTAHUD .... COAST LEAGUE m9 .W L. Pet. , , -W I. Yet. Los AjC M 4 .7(Honyw4 IS IS .484 Kan rnn IS IS .613iSacrama 11 SO J53 Oakland-. ,17 1S J31 PorOandLlO SO -S33 Sao. Dies ! 1 '.Seattle Z.10 30 JS33 Thursday results: . At Portland S. SeatUe S. At T.oa Anveles 2. Hollywood 4. At San Francisco . Oakland 4 (IS innings). At- San Diego 4. Sacramento B (11 Innings). NATIONAL LXACinE f W. L Pet. - W L Pet Brooklyn It 9 .667 Boston 14 .634 Cincinnt IS 13 .480 New Yk It 14 .440 St. Louis 13 10 -365PitUburg 9 13 .409 Philadel IS 11 .543 Chicago T is Thursday results: Brooklyn S. St. Louia S. : PhUadelnbU 3-2.. Chicago 0-S. (Only games.) . AMERICAN LEAGUE -v W L Pet. W L Pet. New Yrk 14 S .63 Detroit -10 11 .474 Washingt 14 11 J60 Philadel 11 14 .440 Cleveland 13 11 J42 Chicago . 11 .421 St. Louis J 9 .500;BostOa 10 14 .41T Thursday results: -- ! Boston 2-7. Cleveland 1-S.I (Only games played.) ' Bunaio . Montreal . Baltunore 8, Newark 0. . .Jersey City 2. Syracuse S. - AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Kansas City S. Louisville 1. Minneapolis S. Toledo 0. -- Milwaukee-Indiana pohs postponed. SOUTHEKV ASSOCIATION Atlanta 8, Memphis 1. . Little Rock 7. Chattanooga 6. Knoxville 0, Birmingham 7. Nashville 8. New Orleans S. The 135 II. Cczzncrcid IP. fete PENSLAR i Ask for PonsUr Aspirin Tablets name. They act promptly. them for relief of colds and minor throat irritations. Sold only by lCs 22s 1 ?itr :; 49 c CUS WKLC YOU IWSK , D-QOY THETNCLE Of . U . . -. i W ANTISEPTINE fi. . :v 25c :. . Columbia Nehalem river still fair, for trout Washington Angling fair; some bass being taken on lower Tualatin. Clatsop Best " catches from lower Nehalem river and Ne canicum river, with spinners and bait Fly, fishing good in small er streams. Coos Streams clearing and fair catches reported. Curry Salmon fishing in Rogue;. river slow but angling reported very good in streams of southern part i Douglas Prospects good, with trout beginning to take flies. : Lincoln ; Should be good if weather conditions unchanged. cylj r fit gL Oh 1 Jr js Woodburn Has Top Ball Nine WOODBURN If the size of the American Legion Junior baseball squad working out under Coach Pete DeGuire is any indication of things to come this year. Wood burn will have one of its best junior nines ever to play under DeGuire. Twenty-four have turned out for the team, and are from Wood burn, ML AngeL Canby, St. Paul and Hubbard high school teams mostly. '': The 24 whe will again work at next 8onday are Walter Miller. Bill Austin. Alrold Zn ber, 1 Clarence Saavain. Dalis Olsoa, Leo Erwert. John Mur phy,' ' Alee Adamskl, L a n e e White, ; James Howard, John Brock, Joe Coleman. Ken Reed,! Original "YELLOW FRONT TlCWWaOSSIOlBfTWOROIMABy, itr: , J IESSISM M IHMAfiWfcRAI0B)SEt- C Lc Sole Agents f or Penslar Remedies for Marion County Prescriptions Filled 1899-1943 Onr modern, folly equipped prescrip . Uon department is thoroughly reli able and all drugs used are guaran teed fresh. Ton get what the Doe tor ordered. We never substitute. Step Coughiag ; Sender's Ilcrtd Balsam SOC and S1-G0 by t Take 5 Sehaefer's Hcrvo zzi Ecne Linincnl For the relief of the discomfort of muscular stiffness and C 1 soreness of muscles, ... vww ; IIoods Poison SOC and T ! 1 If Ton Want to live Lonr DONT, NEGLECT YOUR . , KIDNEYS. Try Sehaefer's Kidney Pills - Tillamook Outlook good. : Jackson Angling h a a ( been poor. Diamond lake still i inac cessible. Josephine Nice catches being taken on flies. Baker Poor because of high water. - -"- - - - ; Grant Should be improved. Gilliam, Morrow and Wheeler Streams .too high. Klamath Upper Klamath lake, Wood river, Crystal creek fair. - i T Lake Dog lake very good for bait and fly fishing and trolling. Unions-Catches have - been small; some steelhead from Grande Ronde river and, Cath erine creek. ABme GQCPS TWJK5 PLAV. feD IMPORTANT ROLES IN SBML 50LDMOW ISLAND BATHES fad K'IPtO DESTROV MWK IM - POftTANT EKcMV POSITIONS, f Jisa Mxnderllle, Den Msnde Tllle, John Garren, Tlnee Trae ger, Joe Bielmeier, Frank Gros Jaeqnes, Walt Faalhaber, Len Spraner, Harold and Roland Ott and Ernest Graham. Bums Peddle Al Kampouris BROOKLYN, May 20-0!P)-The Brooklyn Dodgers announced Thursday night they had sold sec ond baseman Alex Kampouris to the Washington Senators for an undisclosed, sum of cash. The 30-ear-old Calif ornian has been in and out of the National league since the Cincinnati Reds bought him from Sacramento of the Pacific Coast league in 1934. This year he has appeared in 19 of the Dodgers' 27 games and bat ted .222. l Drug and Candy Special Oik Itemed y G2.C0 mr W W J? IJLrti I mm Crook Ochoco and McKay creeks especially improved. Deschutes Some nice catches made in North Twin lake, De schutes river south of Bend and Little Deschutes. .TC r; '- : Jefferson Metolius river and Suttle lake good at times this ! Week.-;; :f; :- 'Mt '-'1:': ' Wasco Good ' run of salmon reported in Deschutes river, with : maay limit catches. Tygh, Bad ger and Eight-Mile best of small er i streams. - Bass, crappie ; and catfish anglers . having ' better luck in Columbia river sloughs west of The Dalles. : Harney Good catches report ed ' in streams Fish lake road now open." At Salem Hi Victory Corps Trackmen Vie Thinclads from each of the six physical fitness classes . at Salem high will vie for the Interclass track and field championships which go on stake at Olinger oval this afternoon' at 4 o'clock. ) Events have already been run off In the respective " classes and those tracksters who placed first, second or third, automatically qualify for today's cinder festi - - - One feature attraction should oosn m tno 22 y are dash, where Jerry Montgomery step ' ped " the course in ' well . under M in class competition. Period ' six Is countms on- a first fas the high Jump with Bob SkopIL, whe has cleared S feet, iopping' the field, while Earl Blarcem Is counted upon for a definite " first in the mile ran. Dick Cor bet's 2;lt Is counted upon for; consideration In the S80. i Catcher Land LOS ANGELES, May 20 The Lbs Angeles Angels, who have won 26 games and lost four in the Pacific Coast league pen nant chase, Thursday lost their star catcher, 22-year-old Harry Land, to the army. Dorazio-Franklin 1 Signed for Bout CHICAGO, May 20 tJP Gut Dorazio, Philadelphia heavy weight,! Thursday, night, was matched, with Iern J'ranklip, hard hitting .Cleveland negro,: in one of three . ten-round matches opening the major outdoor boxing season at the Marigold gardens June 7. Fritzie 2Uvic, Pittsburgh welter weight, will engage Tommy James of Chicago in another ten-rounder, with Nate Bolden of Chicago meeting . Freddie Fiducia, New York heavyweight. Miss Geisler Visils : HOPEWELL Miss Margaret Geisler, 1943 graduate of Amity Union high school, has obtained a stenographic position at Camp Adair and lives at Monmouth. She was a Sunday guest of her par ents here. 1 Salem Folk Visit LEBANON Mr. and Mrs. Chester MacMahin and little daughter of Salem were weekend guests of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. O. MacMahin of Lebanon and Mr. and Mrs. Jackson of Cot tonwood, i - Store. Ftc-o 5107-0723 W,,v 1 Seraph rxLKvi rrooNG su&ace pimples AhO OTHTJt KfiNOX SKM RCTATXS WITH DOLMAoOL, A SOOTHWG MEDtCATEO OMTMEKL " - SOc. ' rOCLAt DENTAL PLATS HOLDC1 : : ScLi;!:rfs Ccrn : is the best for painful corns, bunions and callouses. Don't neglect your feet any p longer. Try it today. w W OPA Acts to Stop Poultry Black: Market i .... i . , ... WASHINGTON, May 20-ff)-ln another move aimed at the poul try "black marker the office of price administration Thursday authorized regional OPA admin istrators to establish uniform live poultry ceilings for country ship pers" and wholesalers ' for entire counties or states. The present system provides a different ceiling price for each community, depending ': upon' the freight rate to the nearest basing point city. OPA said "black mar ket operators" claim they can not get information on all the railroad freight rates and attribute their violations of ceilings to ignorance. - When regional administrators set a uniform price throughout a political , subdivision- under the new order it must not be more than one-tenth of a cent higher than the lowest price now in ef fect . - - . ' ' Kaiser Reveals , Railroad Plans , : SAN FRANCISCO, May 2HJP) Henry J. Kaiser, the shipbuilder, disclosed Thursday he Is planning to turn railroad builder after the war, ; f " i '- : . f " -m. ' r Kaiser said he is negotiating with a group of the nation's great est railroads with a view to build ing . a fleet of fast, lightweight trains in the yards where he now turns out ships. ' 1 r "We agree that our ! railroads must be rebuilt after the war, he saicLWe agree that millions of shipyard workers must have jobs. This will do both." Dayton May Day Exercises Held; ' - Play Nets $140 . ; DAYTON There was a full house at the Dayton.. Union high school May Day ' exercises - held here ' Friday night. . The school glee club under leadership of Miss Alfreds . Martin,"; furnished vocal and musical numbers throughout the program, v The coronation of Queen Mari lee took place at 8 pjn. and the court entered to the processional played by Jeanne Magee. I I UJDC wm E' . ' - . t YER set a newspaperman's desk at the end of a crowded day ash-strewn, paste-smeared, ' littered with the grist of the news mill that never stops? Ifs hardly to be compared with the desk of a great general and yet the enemy was pushed back here todayl : , Pushed back by another 24 hours of truth ful reporting . . ' - i . - - Pushed . back : by community leadership in i myriad war activities from bond selling to fin cqn salvage After a hectic week ef sharing her tiny apartment with Joel McCrea and Charles Coburn, Jean Arthur finds herself alone with McCrea ; In this romantlo seene from George Sterens comedy, TThe Mere the Merrier. Opens Saturday at Burton Rites Set Saturday Funeral services for Mrs. Roy Burton, who died at her home here Wednesday, are to be held at 2 p. m. Saturday from the chapel of the Clough-Barrick 1 company. Rev. David Neilson of the First Con gregational church officiating, t Mrs. Burton, whose husband, long with the Ladd and Bush bank here, died last year,; was the daughter of J. H. Acker-man, who was state4 - superintendent of schools here prior to becoming president of Oregon Normal school, , now. Oregon College of Education, at Monmouth in 1912. Mr. Ackerman remained at the helm of the normal school until his death in 1921. Mrs. Burton had served as chief clerk in the state education office here during her father's term. Dr. Alvin Burton, son of Mrs. Burton, arrived here Thursday from his home in Berkeley. Improving JEFFERSON Bobby Brown, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Brown, who has been ill with pneumonia in a Salem hospital, returned home Monday. ' Mrs.. T. A. Cooper, who has been quite in, is reported to be improved in health. I i ! I . f the Elslnore. Group Full O f Smiths OREGON CITY, May 20-ff)-If you ' removed the Smiths from Oregon City's three-man council budget planning committee you wouldn't have much left. .County Judge E.-1.- Pope ap pointed Tom Smith, a local-labor leader. Commissioner George Ran dall named Bob Smith of Sandy and , Commissioner . C W. Kruse named Ward Smith of Lake Grove. Clayton Gibb Heads Scouts SWEGLE Clayton Gibb has been chosen for Scout Master for the new Swegle district troop. The second meeting of the group was held Wednesday night ; Mrs.' Howard Ames of Seattle is spending ten days at the home of her parents,, Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Brandt. - y- The , Revl C Kaufman and family have moved from the W. F. Starr homi on Hollywood Drive. JLv; ; A. C Swegle school board met Mon day night In regular session. Only the routine business of- completing the budget was transacted. ft ? Pushed back by the. little things that help build and sustain a nation's morale the per! sonal items, the pictures of the boys at the front, J the helps on the home page, the laughs on the comics page and the information and inspiration! throughout the newspaper. . ' Yes, the enemy was pushed back here again today. ' . . ' He will continue to fall beck to bng cs .American - newspapers have anything to da cbcut it! -: TVhirlivind Plays Havoc With Ranch THE DALLES, May 2!-0T-An overgrown whirlwind had itself wonderful time . on the - Frel Erickson ranch la. lower MiU creek Wednesday. . , It-picked up an orango crate, bounced it 50 feet In the air and' carried it 30 feet. Then it swoop ed down and picked up an oil orchard heater and dumped Jia oil all over Erickson's tomata plants. . ; v Swirling .afield it ripped apart ' a shock of alfalfa and scattered five other shocks in a cherry or-" chard. ' Whereupon the playful wind ; funnelled its way over a hill in' a huge cloud of dust. Negro Caught Shoots Self ' TULLAHOMA. Tenn, May 20 (AV Trapped by police at a Nash villa bus station, a Tullahoma negro cafe proprietor . sought in ' the rape-slaying of an army offl- 1 cer's wife at Camp Forrest near here Thursday shot and fatally wounded himself. . - --. The negro, George (Slim) John- . son, was sought In connection , with the slaying of Mrs. Norma Faye Scogin, 19, wife - of Lieut. , . George L. Scogin, of Des Moines, Iowa, whoso body was found early, ; yesterday beneath a brush pile on the reservation. v i" Mrs. Scogin had been shot twice through the breast and her head beaten, apparently with a pistol, parts of which were found near the body. A coroner's jury s returned a verdict of murder and rape. Sergeant J. J. Jackson of the state highway patrol said that be-v , fore losing consciousness Johnson admitted shooting Mrs. Scogin and beating her with the butt of hia Pistol. . i- . :. , V' : Miss Wacken Ends Year ; HAZEL GREEN Lois Wacken daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rudoph Wacken returned ' homo i Tuesday after staying through the school year with her grandparents, Mr. v and Mrs.' John Thleleri at Gold' Beach and ' attending high 'school there. . - , -lit. t V - 9 '; n iW MM.