Sdcmt .c;E3?4lcnt Chancel of : (kptnrmg State's Ckder Oasa at Corvallis This Weekend . Crystal ball counter: Sorest ewspar clippings-sdne phono eaBa, a pow wwr with two eeaches. one eaa af emptied as pirin. nightmare and s visit 'tea- wsmeeg eaijs heard resultl Wve doped out the ' incoming ltth auttl Oregew state track and field- meet for - tht preppers, doe next Friday and Saturday aft feeU Field. Cor valUs. Won't make no mad If yo change that "dope" from a t verb to ft proper noun and ' point at s when yea do It. for picking a cinder winner Is quite like plckln' the ponies. The ones which "cant miss'' often never do that Is., If jon pick 'em to finish any place - hut first But we're calculated, added, euhtraeted and compared, and every time we're arrived at the same i answer for the state championship fa I e am high's TOdnta, Fantastic, what? Es pecially so sls only last spring the Tlklscs were-represented hi althouffh Thee, would only Clark of CorraUls 3.-CSJL Fire aaore points for Salem and tnebbt mora. Kaey bat. a good habit of cheeking fat closely be hind Lambert whether tt be in or t:C3. Call ft a bunch If you wO, but we figure Tom , Grimm fifth fat the mile for another point lie's bees on the improve side and could bit that 4:5 Saturday. If he dees hell Probably -wind Bp behind the taiA of Rome Elver's Clark, the iALZ of FrahUln's Howe, the 4:19 J. of Seappoose'a Jones and the 4:4J ef MelaUat Dick bXarquardt Lyle Wmiams pole vault of 11' r b rood for a third and perhaps a second. ' Only Dale Nefdcnneler of Med ford has bettered If with bis 11' 11H. Rasnu-ssea of Bend went 11-1 as did llanter of Cor raUls. Three points here, lea lenily. rj. '-.-rf A blank in the Ugh Jump by Dick Gatka and bis t-t RtH bare to hit at least f-ll to ret a ribbon. Cottage . Grove's Ron Hathaway went 1H" Grants rasa Spauldlnjr S-10 and low ethers from as nuyj- schools -. Nothing U the shot put by. Mel miflcker and his 42-feet UK Inches. Smead of Bend has a 11-8, Anderson of Scappoose a S-(. Nelson of Junction City a 47-4H- - Altenhofen of j Central Catholic ft 44-7 and FletchaU of Benson a 44-i The W 11' platter twirUnir by Art Cott-' fried could rate a fourth place behind the 114 of Scappoose's Anderson, : the UV HH x Junction City's; Nelson, the lie feet : of Bearerton's Sprinter. BJnearsoav of Oregon City and' Tank of Klamath Falls can alw bit -tht I23-fot -mark. Weber's . XT t bread Jump (and be fees erer XI fat practices) we rate .third behind the tl-f of New berrls SXardock and the XI of Grants rase Hoskey. UUv of Boardman also sneaks erer the St.foot mark. The ls-1 el Dick Brown of the Ytks wont ret far enoorh. Another fifth place, bat an aO-lmportant point ea Don Wilson's jarella toss of 44S-SI. Sprinrfiehfs Bud Boqua bit 175. Mae m's Cue lSS-i, Bearerton's Sprlnrer UO-f and Milwaukle's Worthinrton 1SP-X. The rest are - below Wilson and - most erftt below Salem's Norm Dal ke at 14t-lVi. The TIk reUy quartet of Bill Bobbins, Dare Getsendaner, Bach and Weber should ret a fourth with their ldfceV: Beaverton leeks best with lU, Fsxtosse next with UU U ttod byBoooerolt and the rest behind Salem at from 1:21 emvp. Shuffle em all torether and you ret S3 pohtto for Salem. And the fact that C2 schools wCl be bttinf aft points here -and there Is a rood reason why XX points could easily take home the linen. If youll check back yeuH find that the ether . schoola with best times repre sented arent mentioned nearly so often as the Tlks, another point en the SHS side. But re- . member, anythinr can happen la s track meet-thls effort is merely a surrestlou of what COULD happen. And for Heav en sake, dent bet en It while we doled out the llf-yd. dash:. Bob Weber's UfclS best n tht state, and WC3e Bach net toe far behind. Other marks were dM by Oer Yabj of Bearertoa and Hay den of Central Catholic; a Us.45 by Brisbane of More and a xlt 3 by Walker of Washington. Salens 5 points and mebbe mora, tl yd. dash. Bach's tt 4 flat Ignored after spotting the HXJi of Regno River. Fitzgerald, the H 5.1 of both Lilly and Boardmsn and Kitry of Forest Grove, the -83.7 of Schlavln of Jefferson and the 2XJ of Clark of Bend. SSO-yd. run: Benny Xambert's 2:03.1 best fat the state and Bob Maey not far behind. Others were El mers of Jefferson 2:05J. Me Cann of Hnisbore 3:97.4, Daw son of Klamath Falls 2:07.1 and points through the C3 schools which wO be represented, we handed his Vlklnrs (and len iently, tee) CI of 'em. enoorh to hack it. . . Of hoarse this is all "on paper" stuff and : concerns , only' what wo could dip from results el the isUte's district meets. A lot can I happen between now and Friday, to say nothing of the Inspiration which will affect some kids by performing fat the blue: ribbon. gigantic .and the 1 u m p - la - stomach tightness which win blanket . others for the fsame reason. But were the meet ribbons passed out solely en bow the boys performed fas their district sessions. It . would bo Salem ta first place. Here's the classic by only one sprinter Boh Warren. finished fas a dead heat for ninth place If we recall correct ly. But this time It's different. Salem . toes to CorraUls 2t ttrong, the, largest squad fat the scrap, and Included In that 2 are .Vikings capable of 0001109 erer 2 points. A confab with Coach Tommy Drynan; who in--Mentally sluffs off point blank track questions with an "aw, .well ret a point or two," eon 1rlnced us that the team which can come up with tt points Sat r urday wfll cop the neJ 1 cup. Surp It Odd one comes in from Pat Beal, all-around man from principal - on down st Jefferson high, wanting' to know how to correctly, solve this situation: Jefferson Was playing Aumsville in a baseball came not long ago and was two runs ahead, 5-3. Aumsville, the visiting team, was at bat with the bases loaded and with one out lit the agreed-upon 7-inning game. It had . been raining the entire game, but at this point the storm turned to cloudburst proportion and it simp-' ly had to be called. The Jeffersons .claimed the win in lieu of the fact that over half the 7-inning "game had been played. Aumsville ctaimed the Jeffs were all wet in two ways and protested officially. That's just where it hung when Beal was stttl trying to scratch out the answer during the district T track fiesta last week. Naturally, had the game been of 9-innings duration beforehand, it would have gone on the books as no contest since the official 4Vi innings were not played. The Aumsville protest would require . that the game be taken up exactly from where it left off bases loaded, one out etc in order to decide it That is, if it had been scheduled for nine heats instead of seven. But then if it had been scheduled for nine, Aumsville wouldn't have had cause to protest - lor Jefferson couldn't possibly have claimed victory. We've thumbed through every record book in the joint and can find nothing which alleviates a situation such as 4 16 innings played in a 7-inning game - being enough for a win. Under 9-inning professional rules, the game would have to.be played over in. entirety. But it was an ama teurs' game scheduled for seven. ..' , : A problem needing an answer.; Anyone who can solve it rightly, please get in touch with Principal Beat Our helpless response fin ally amounted fef, 'WotVett you playing in the rain for in the first place?. - 4 Salem Senator ' Day' Sunday : Could well have been called "Salem Senator Day" Sunday at Portland's Vaughn street park enough former village favorites were around to warrant it for sure. For instance that second game. There was Roy Helser pitching it, Eddie Adams catching it and beUering that familiar "Cmon, Roy, showjne wbatcha.got", Charlie Petersen " in center field. Duke Windsor in. the bull pen and Trisco Edwards umpiring. And we saw no less than 50 villagers in the stands watching,-another familiar touch since many were the times no more than 90 braved watching the boys when they were class B performers. Quite a day they had, too. Helser won his game, Trisco got no real loud boos, Peter got three hits, Adams drove him in once with ' another and Windsor was the envy of the multitude lying out on ' the bull pen grass in . the warm sunshine. And when the boys had so much to do with Portland's winning that last game, we just couldn't help but think of an old baseball adage "If you can't beat em, get 'era on your side;"' Recalling of course the fruitless efforts of the pre-war Beavers against the village nine when those stal- - warts were on our side. ' " Pete's love for the game has already cost him six bottles of ar nica and two rolls of tape, and before the season is out UH probably cost him a lot more.. He's frozen to his war industry job, which re quires that be be at -work at 7 U. m., stand on his feet ail day and finish around 4:30 p. m. He then fights the traffic to get home to eaU leaves right afterward and goes to the ball park. It's at least midnight before he gets home following the game and he's up again at 9:30 so's he can be to work again at seven. A guy must love baseball a lot to whip off a schedule like that ' every .day, eh? And on lop of it all, Chas. hadn't touched a baseball all winter or spring when he was bought by the Bevos and put to i work In center field! After Sunday's double bill he could hardly walk. Bum One Minute, Hero th Next Couldn't help but catch this proof of how superbly fickle a ball fan really is, offered by a talkative gent parked directly behind us Sunday: Petersen had just looked at a third strike go by, same thrown by 49-year-old Herman "Old Folks" -Pillette In the first game. He had hit three consecutive line drives in previous times at bat aU ' being caught but it made no difference to the long-winded custo mer behind us. fLookit thaV hissed the fan, "what th heU did they go and spend good money for a player like him? He never could hit Phooey!" -. . ";'" Came the second game and Pete walloped out his three straight bits, the third of which was a well-tagged double to left-center. Ah!" beamed the same guy. That was the smartest deal Portland ever made, buyin' him. Yes .sir" ;V; x Itll never change In. the customers mind, either. One minute a baiigamer is a urn uas uwx u - tv..; mayor, - . V; ':cZ'--'''-yl':: ' ' ' Hunters & Anglers to Discuss Walton Switch, 8 p.m. Meeting ' The Salem Hunters and Anglers club, which becomes a full fledged chapter of the National Izaak Walton league July 1, will discuss that switch amongst other business during tonight's meeting at Eagles hall starting at & o'clock, a n n o u n c e s Publicity rhiirmsn Don Madison. A new set of league officers wUl be nom inated tonight to replace those of the disbanding H&A club. It Is also the Intention of the club to draw up a new charter tonight Bernard W. Torpen, consulting engineer for - the United States army engineers wiU be one of to- Greeners Win a Pair HAZEL GREEN Hazel Green .rhnnt'i snftballers .added a cou ple of wins to their record here last week, defeating Hayesville 19-9 Thursday and setting back the- North Howell-Lake Labish ag prppation Friday. 8-3. The Green- ies will face Central HowelT.in a return engagement here rnaay. Crcclism Slates T.Icet O R E S II A M, May 9.-(Vrhe t-rir.2 horss race meet will start here June I, with eight races r ; - V.!y. A. II. , Lea, fairgrounds t :-3ck r--.:nac?r, said t3day. . . If . ; :...;..;-;? ' s-.J S. '. - -4 , ij".vs ' "1- r- i J"i t "T1-!- i iV SI in J EDDIE ADAMS night's speakers and will talk on the Detroit dam and Willamette vaUey project H&A Qub Presi dent - James Loder, recently re turned from the convention of the Federtalon of Western Sportsmens clubs in : Arizona, will also talk and give a report on that conclave. The meeting is expected to be one of the largest in months, and anyone interested in the club . is invited to attend. The usual re freshments will be served follow' ing the meeting. A PDOTECT YOUD CilD IIOUI I5IMEDIATE SERVICE AVAILABLE .TRAINEOMECHaJNICS - EXPERT E0DY. MEN Complete Overhauling Front Wheel Aligning Brake Ke lining Motor Analysing Steam Cleaning . . . Lubrications i Coy Bonds Olismotlle Dealer Parks Debuts, 1V7? mi !! wins inruiing Battle Royal Hefb "Pinky" Parks, still as dynaniic as ever he was when he rassled here a few years ago, made his 1944 debut In slam-bang style last flight at the armory before nearnr 1000 customers and won himself the top stipend of war stamps in the bristling battle roy al He whipped Toothless Tougie Porter in the finale, two falls of three, the latter requiring a brief overtime period. Almost as welcome as Parks' win ver the Tacoma heel was the discomposure of Gorgeous Georgie Wagner in the first five minutes of the strictly hilarious "royal." Parks, Tex Hager and Walt TV Sneeze" Achiu. all cleanies. took care jpf Georgie In A-l shape. They took I turns butting him into the proper position and then all f ell topside. Hager was next when Parks and Billy McEuin ! hopped aboajrd together. It took all three left to send. Achiu out a few min utes ater as the royal hit its peak and jhad most of the multitude on their feet Then a rugged leg s temper on McEuin by Parks while Achiu sneaked back in the ring to juj jitsu Porter out of the way took! care of the- Texas j meanie pal of Wagner's.' That set it 'up for an Achlu-McEuin semiwindup and the Parks-Porter main event Achiu and McEuin went 20 min utes In a corker before Th Sneeze finally put the crusher on Mac withfa long series of leg locks and stompers. He did it so effectively McEuin couldn't answer for the next I faU and Achiu took . down the $100 in war stamps. Porter grabbed the first fall over I Parks with hammer locks wnerf tne pair went at it in their thrillier. But Parks, exhibiting a crop of fresh mat tricks, roared backand brought more roars by taking the second with a "Cana dian! stomp" Porter flat on his back and helpless beside an arm bar With Parks kicking him trip hammer style smack in the face. He liust have kicked Porter ful ly 250 times while the mob howled and bowled before Porter finally gavelup. They were still going at it inNo.' 3 when the time limit intervened, and when Referee El ton Owen couldn't decide who to givefthe win to they agreed on another five minutes. It took cat like I Parks just I Vt minutes to butt! drop-kick and slam Porter for tjie victory and $200 worth of Uncle Sam's best. Toothless Toughie got $100 worth. , I lker Paces National Loop NEW YORK, May 9-(ff-Dix-ie Walker of Brooklyn Is the No. 1 hiler in the national league as well as the people's choice in Flatbush with his league-leading .421 (average on the eve of the eastern clubs' first western inva sionJ ' I ' ;.'::. . - -Jj: With Stan Musial of the Cards. the 1943 king and last week's leader, losing 63 points and drop ping! to third, at .379. the runner- up spot went to Joe "Ducky" Med wick of the New York Giants, with! .381. How They STTAMIID... COAST L.EAGVK V W L Pet W LPct San Fran 30 IS 667 San Diexo IS IS -5l Portland 18 IS jSOO Los Aug .14 IS AS3 HUywd. 17 IS MTl Oakland 1I 20 J75 Seattle 17 13 J3lSaeramto S 21 XI Last Right's results At paJtland 7. Sacramento S. Hollywood at Portland, postponed, (travel delay). Salt; Franc laco at Seattle, postponed, (wrt xraunda). San Diego at Los Aneles, postponed. iiraTfi oeiari. 445 Center -Phone 1133 . Coy Bonds GRIMM TAKES OVER: Going to away. Manager cnarlie Gi-imsa of the Chicago Cobs by getting team dngoat at Wrigley Field before a doableheader with the Pitts burgh Pirates. Grimm was manager of the Cubs 1932-38. P. 8. The Cabs lost both games for Grimm's Statesman Clinches 2nd Half Industrial Loop The Statesman took two of three games from M Sc F Grocery ast night in the Industrial league bowling session at Perfection, and by so doing clinched the second half pennant. One more session remains next: week before the Statesman meets first-. half winning Wahl Bros, for the last night Wohl Bros.: took two from Brite Spot, , Papermakers took two more from Capital City Laundry and Valley Oil swept all three from Scio. Mathis paced the Statesman win with his 530 series and was followed closely by i Wheatley, 529, and Stettler, 520.; Scio's Ed Krejd tossed a 582 series for high over all and the 235 single game by Floyd Kenyon took honors In that department STATESMAN ft) White : 183 Melville 154 StetUer IBS Wheatley 169 Mathis .no 161 157 1S4 189 322 168513 136447 148520 171529 138 530 Totals .864 913 761 2538 Mar cRocKmv- i Morgan . 134 B. Griffith 179 144 147 157 168 154 140 418 128 454 131-433 168495 143 494 McCluskey D. Griffith .161 -197 Forcard Totals .850 820 782 2452 WAHL BROS. Pederaon McNaU Haagenson West Wahl 2 .181 -200 189 145 111 200 IBS 173643 136481 150-388 172558 170-463 An AM -105 Totals -779 833 800 -412 BUTE SPOT CI) Handicap 42 42 127 161 157 17S 154 819 ! 42126 144329 161-470 137444 175020 235572 894 2481 ranerson 158 Gallagher .148 Collins . 'M Olney 167 Kenyoa ia ; Totals : j. 1 -84S CAP IT AX, CRT LAUNDBT (1) Kirchner .169 -131 .158. -144 -144 173 177819 112-419 Riley 178 141 133 184 Blaekie Maelke Larson . 179479 2-9 405 165493 otals -747 'SOS 862 2313 PAPEBMAKER'S Handicap Bolton - . , 39 135 147 167 160 133 39117 174 455 193518 Hart Cady 169-485 T. "r '"" 1 ' Coleman . -120 119389 170433 -130 Totals -760 781 868 2397 SCIO (9) Handicap Densmore Krejd . IS -170 -201 -173 -110 -122 18 173 202 151 127 128 IS 54 151494 179582 140464 150387 119369 Hendrickson Caswell . Schrunk Totals .794 799 757 2350 6.00-16 Sizo Tires How Available To Those Eligible Cat ewauws who olreody pos sess eorti-icatos pomittiaff Ihe-a to parchaao' stow -m ess d wbo here Ijeen sw-Ht to fiad GewU I tirao will ho plod to road this sews. Now wo hare a good stock of th best STnti-eUc Utm hmilt B. F. CoMWch SilveetowM . . indading a stock of the popular SJ-ir. Dri-e to at Official Tire lupttf ' j B. F. G::irxc!i " i Silvcrlsra S!:rc3 13S So. Commercial - Phone S15S - i ' . Salem, Ore.. . (2) 39 144 178 149 j ' B. F. Goodrich Tiros - f - 1 ' o l work as thongm ho never had Dees ngnt) starts nls Ilrst oay as pilot aeqaainted with his players 1st the debnt. (AP WtrephoU). , Bow championship. In other outings vaixev on. CO. CD H. Valdes 17t- j HI M0 S20 NofUincer ., : , 157 197 197 5S1 Riches IN 16Q ZZ KS W. Valdec 174 US 157 1 Ertsjaard 174 134 .124-432 Totals -850 828 862 2540 Travel Woes Hit PCL 9s ''!' I ' Wartime transportation and the Pacific Coast league base ball schedule wouldn't jibe yes terday and two games were postponed because of it. Bolly wood and Portland, slated for Vaoahn street park to Pertland last night, was one contest the Stars eonldnt make it in time from southern Calif ernto. San Francisco get to Seattle, but Wet grounds forced post ponement of their j game. Ssa Diego couldn't get to Los An geles In time from Seattle. The Beavers and Stars wUl . play tonight and catch up with a doableheader Thursday night. San Diego and Los Angeles play a twin bill today. Navy Nine Nips Ptils GREAT LAKES, 111- May 9.Wi -"Schoolboy Rowe's two-run ho mer In the seventh inning broke up a neat pitching duel today and enabled the Great Lakes naval training center baseball team to whip his former teammates, the Philadelphia Bluejays, 3 to 1, be fore 10,000 sailors. -' a .ATT? Sims1 doauvj . SICKS' CHEWING CO.V7ANY : SALEM- OHEGOM Webfoots to Definitely Floor Basket Oiiint f n i ww EUGENE, Orei May P-iRu- mors that the University of Ore gon will drop basketball; its only remaining wartime intercollegiate sport, and give coaches indefinite leaves f or the. ! duration were squelched by Orlando ! J. Hollis, acting president,! today. I ) Hollis announced administra tion approval of a request for sab batical leave by Howard A. Hob son, .yeteran basketball and base ball coach, but ? said the school definitely will continue its bas ketball program hext winter. Hobspn will spend a year at Co lumbia university studying for a doctor of physical education de gree. He wUl resume his coach ing duties July 1, 1945, Hollis said. Hobson recommended his coaching duties ! be assumed : by John Warren, acting head football Etten Leads CHICAGO, May 9 KffV- Nick Etten, I the New York Yankees' 29-year-old first baseman, led American league batters with a powerful .478 mark in averages computed through Sunday's games but he j had to share the statistical spotlight with the! St Louis Browns young pitcher, Jack Kra mer. j r i Kramer, a 26-year-old navy dis chargee who won eight of the 10 games be hurled; for Toledo of the American association last season. is out to become the first 20-game winner; of the 1944 campaign. He already has collected five victor ies without a defeat! - Based on SO or more times at bat Etten was followed in i the first ten list of leaders by Wash ington'S George Myatt, last week's pace setter who dropped from ,444 to .3915 Bob Swift petroit .371; Lou Boudreau, Cleveland, - .344; George Stirnweiss, New York, J40; Epitacio Torres and Rick Ferrell of Washington and Bob Johnson of Boston; each with .333; Irv Hall, Philadelphia, J16; and Guy Curtwright Chicago White Soar, -308.1 Probable In Major Hurlers NEW YORK, May HH'ro- bable pitchers in tomorrow's maj or league baseball games. (Won and lost records j in parenthesis.) ' i i ; ' NATIONAL LEAGUE New York at CincinnaU (night) Voi selle (3-J) vs. j Walters (3-1) Boston; ' a t Pittsburgh (night) Javery (0-3) vs. Strincevich (! 0); Philadelphia at Chicago Lee (1-0) vs. Fleming (0-2); Brook- lm mt R TvniaLW-att tt-1 xrm fM. Cooper (0-2)J t -AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit at New t York Tir out (1-3) vt Bonham (1-1); Chicago at Phila delphia Ross (O-ll) or Lopat (1 1) vs.; Hamlin (0-2); Cleveland at v. Boston Harder i (2-0) i vs. Woods! (1-1); St.j Louis at Wash ington (night) Potter (3-1) i vs. Neggeling (1-0). "nVT ' iiext season Amerk Hitting i . ::. -rrt 1 -'ill-' inooson la Res Absence Leave .11. : ,,AW K i-ifiitfTiiliif HOWARD HOBSON coach and freshman basketball and football coactu. , ,r f j Athletic Manager Anson Cor nell said be was happy Hobson has the opportunity and that he will welcome his return. Cornell added he never believed the ath letic board considered abandon ing basketball if possible to con tinue. Hollis' statement said; in part: '.j ' i- - 4 .' . "f "The university intends to con Louis Claims Boer Toughest Boxing Foe LONDON, May 9-iff)Staff Sgt Joe Louis, heavyweight" boxing champion, surprised American sol' diers and others before whom he has appeared almost nightly in ex hibitions by naming Max Baer today as the toughest opponent he ever met He nominated Baer in an ail-opponent team selected for Stars and Stripes, servicemen's publication. ' ,1 Billy Conn, who came close to lifting Joe's crown at New York's Polo Grounds in 1941, and the challenger he probably will meet first in the post-war era, was named five times in the mythical lineup, however. Louis rated Conn not only as the smartest of all his opponents, but also the fastest, the possessor of the most effective Jeft and the one with the best-off eose and best defense. In another sur prise, Joe named Jim Braddock as having the most potent right not Max Schmeling who flattened him in 12 rounds in New York in 1936. "I - pitched more strikes against Baer than I did against a half doz en ordinary opponents," Louis said in explaining his choice. On the other side, Joe said the hardest punch he ever landed was the one that chilled Paulino Uzcudun in the fourth round in New York, in To help ca lie . Spinach Pack Day and nighl shill work ' Prevailing wages paid " The armed forces need this food we need' i you to help. Men who worked last year are 1 urged to come back to work Men working in other essential industry most clear, with the U S. Employment office. Boys 16-18 must have work permit. PLEASE APPLY AT THE HILL ST. OFFICE . California Packing Corp., Salem tinue Its program of basketball Intercollegiate competition during the coming year. Hobson has re quested a sabbatical leave' of one year to continue study for his doc tor's degree at Columbia, where he received his master's degree' in 1929. r- r.!'- --. . "Mr. Hobson hopes to have an opportunity to assist with the navy physical fitness program at Columbia while he is ? studying there. He also plans to do some research work in basketball. ' He has been on the staff of the school of physical education and of the athletic board for nine years. 1 "His request for sabbatical leave has been approved by the university adininistration and by ' Chancellor Frederick M. Hunter upon the usual terms of compen sation and is subject to final ap proval by the state board of high er education. "Mr Hobson will resume his duties as baseball and basketball coach July V1943." Reports ! were that Cornell, Warren and CoL Bill Hayward, track coacby seem certain to be retained on the staff of the. phy sical education school. Three Softy Tilts Today i Willamette university's Golds, resting in a tie with the WU . Cardinals for first place in Salem city softball league standings, will ' face Maple's Sporting Goods on Sweetland field today at 8 p.m. In one .of , three City wheel games listed for that time. J Other tilts will pit Papermak ers opposite Golden Pheasant at Leslie . field and Keith Brown against Willamette's Blues at ' Sweetland. Papermakers' Percy Crofoot and the Pheasants' Bob T ' ' a ... t 1 V 1 i-n-gni win pruQauiy pe opposing pitchers In the former battle. DAN HARMON FOR CONGRESS - The . Republican party, expects to get our country out of this mess, but it cant do so by re electing the same old crowd of lawyer-politicians who got us in to the alphabetical soup. To be progressive, the Republican Party must get the "old timers' out and put some progressive men in Congress. DAN HARMON Is such a man. He is successful. i DAN HARMON believes in thrift hard work and honesty, as a foundation of progressive ac-. tion. In Congress do we want suc cess or seniority? j Congress has been full of sen iority (men too old to put up a good fight) for years let us try success instead of seniority for a change. ; ; zi ,. r , y-J: : Take a look at : the voter's Kamphlet and listen to DAN HAR ION speak over KOIN every Thursday at 9:15 P. M. ; Fd. Pot Adv. Dan Harmon for Congress Committee.