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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1950)
!lt. . n .' - L J Tlui'Cldssraca; DAILY AND SUNDAY The Walions Top Comics in Your Home Wcwtpspey Marquez Y7ins ThcyH Do It Every Time a- a By Jimmy Hatlo Pre llllllllH11' ' . Game Race West Single Gives San Diego Opener SAN DIEGO, CattL, Aug. 20-ff) Max West's timely hitting and Al Olsen's pitching were major fac tor a 5Un . T"ipi7ri Hast Portland to 4 and 1 to 0 in a Pacific Coast league double-header today. "West hot single inside first in the ninth inning with, the bases loaded brought' the Padres from behind to victory in the first game. Olsen blanked the Beavers in the nightcap for his 17th win of the Luis Marquez, Portland center fielder, won a 75-yard foot race between games, finishing six feet .head of San Diego's Orestes Mm cso. The Padres' Al Smith was third. San Diego returned to Its win ning stride, after losing to Portland yesterday. The double-win gave the Padres victory in 13 of their last 14 games. - ; Olsen allowed only three hits In besting Bob Drilling in a pitcher! battle. He also stopped tne Hit ting streak of Marquez at 20 games. At Seattle the Rainers rallied for two rnru in the sixth Inning .. . At tl.....H A. a n It Bl uie iuiuiu.av w iwiiui mxx v v ens and sweep their doubleheader. l. V..a 4V. MunA A 9 The twin victory gave Seattle the series 4-3 I At Los Angeles, a 10th inning mAv Ra nhntV C4Msm ffflva th Hollywood stars iiu 3 victory ever Los Angeles in the second tame of a doubleheader. The An gels won the opener, 6 to 4, and took the series, five games to two. At San Francisco. Oakland and Ban Francisco today split a double header. Oakland, grabbing the nigmcap, 9 to i, ana we oeais we opener. 11 to 9. B B OA B H OA CarqecmS fhomas.3 S BasoskU 4 Rocco.l 4 Broviaj 4 Mole.l 4 Ritcheyx 4 Auatiaoi 4 Creel S B-rrj Si Smlthl OjMinOMJ 3'SlrepBmn V Graham j O'West.l 0 Storey J . 0 Wilson .3 2 Kerr.e -l'ZuTrlnk.p OaAdams 0 bCowibs IWelmSrjp Treah.e IcMoore.e IdWeiUmn leSntre Totals 17 11 25 T Total 34 1017 One out when winning run scored, Walked for Kerr In 7th. b Hit into double play for Zuverlnk In 1th. Lined out for Tresh to Sth. i Singled for Welmaker In 9th. . O Han for Adama In Tth. Portland 100 102 0004 San Diego 000 Ml 103 S Winning pitcher, Welmaker. pitcher. CreeL Pitcher: Cuverink relmaker Creel Vlefnii TP AB H HER BB SO 7 31 4 10 4 - S J 1 0 0 l , ,33 I I I 8 8 in i e i i e Runs Marques, Rocco 3. Brovla. Smith 2, Minoso. Simpson 2. Left on bases Portland 7. San Diego 10. Two base hits Marques, West. Smith. Borne runs Bocco, Brovla. Simpson. Sacrifice CreeL Stolen bases Smith. Marquez. Runs batted in Bocco X, Brovla 3. Simpson 3. Minoso. West S. Double play Boccoto Austin to Boc ' eo. Tim 3:28. Umpires Cartucd. Bngeln and Bentz. Second rarUaad B H Varqzjn S 0 ThoinasJ S 1 Baanskl4 3 Rocco.l S 1 Broviaj S alej 3 0 Atastroot S AusUnj t DrUling 1 1 : 1 (1) Saa Blec OA BBOA 4 01 Smith! S 1 S.t 3iMiaoM3 sett 1 3SimpsAJn 3 110 5 l Grahamj 3 3 3 0 2 OlWesU 2 0 S 3 vStorevJ 3 0 11 2 O Wilson J 2 0 11 1 SiMooree 240 1 OtOlsenji Hit Totals 24 SIS Portland Saa Diego Pitcher: ling - 421 S Totals 23 000 000 100 000 1 IP AB R HDt BB SO 0 33 1 4 1.1 1 1 34 3 0 4 Run Minoso. Errors Mastro, Minoso. Loft on bases Portland X Stan Diego S. Stolen base Minoso Run batted tn Graham. Doubta play Storey to Wilson to West. Tim 1:11. Umpires Engebx Bents, and Car- bicci. Attenaance ja.oea. kland 41 102 SIS 2 t 003 000 20 11 10 Barrist. Thompson 4). Nelson ( and Noble; Savaresc, FNdman () Partee. OaUand an fra Gettel ( and and Orteig. 020 102 o s n MO 000 1 f Dempsey Bollywood Loa Angels Angelas Salveaoi Bandtock 300 000 C10 t t 001 104 00- Mondorff (7) and Parte. Hollywood Los Aagele (7); Mallory and Cash, 000 101 100 1-4 020 100 000 03 (3). Karpel (T). Sb WHAT DOES US Y ' J'Mf. - r""" tQr."mT!uw tm, wewa wans itsum "jY, S2J BLONDE 0 tr , (twcts vwr C0ME3J mfLr PffOM TOO MUCH if-. . 2 TWESP0RI5 CEPARTWEKT. WEVETRED TOE BELT. Grakars Being Raised As Oregon Game Bird -J Did THACY a IT BEliDMGS TO A GLfV WMO was KICKED OUT OF PROFESSOOALWRESTUMCi ABOUT 3 VEARS AGO NAME, wWATELSE DO VCU KNOA : ASOUTAWCH? Vt5-0MCDNSO0US OR NOT. 111. HAVE TO TAKE WR BACK TO TWEMf I CANT WALK THE STREETS ALL NIGHT r Several years from, bow, a hardy partridr that hails from Asia may provide sport for Ore gon nimrods. The chnkar part i rldxe, already established In arid refcions of the West has been successfully reared this rammer at the Oreron State Game Com missions Hermlston and Ortarlo same farms, j - f - The 837 yoans; ehukars belnr raised at the two came farms will provide breeding; stock for intro ductory plantings in eastern Ore ron. Errs for the Oreron ramo farms were supplied by the ramo departments of Washington. Ida ho, " and - Wyominr. WasWnrton made its introdaetory chnkar plants between 1939 and 1942, and last fall sportmen in that state enjoyed 28-day chnkar partridge season. 1 I Experience in other states has shown that the bird is well ad apted to ramo farm conditions and err fertility is hirh. The Hermlston ramo farm had an 85 per cent hatch. The chnkar is reputed to be able to r lor Ions periods withoutTood or water. It will adapt itself to a variety of conditions. In Washington, the birds pre fer rather deep canyons with rocky hillsides and cliffs. Cheat ; rraas is their chief winter diet. ' The Oreron Game commission feels that the birds will nil a niche in eastern Oreron now oc cupied by no other ramo birds In size, the chnkar is midway : between a pheasant and a quail. It has shiny red lets, a red bin, and a greyish body, barred on the sides with black stripes. This partridge's flight is strong and swift, but It will usually lie after one rood fllrhL The chnkar runs and flushes at lonr distances. On the domestic aide, the male chnkar is said to take but one mate. Most ramo birds are polyg amous. In its native habitat, the chnkar partridre is foand from Mongolia to the Himalaya moun tains and south to Nepal. rtii Tcnoioi cm An in ccc 7POf ti MDikf ROUND AN KlAYlN Wlln tVtKTBUUT tf5C, m w A a a ia a if a s tsa Saa a A a a f utn aJL UVESmiTS A SURE SIGN ThEYkE AWFUL NICE PEOPLE, I l 1 si?a A , EwJaoii IW G2) WdDhS Eastera pemi CirooDii : BALTIMORE, Au& ,20-t5VLloyd Mangrum, cool and deadly when the pace was hotest, roared home in 69 strokes today to grab the $2,600 Eastern Open coif prize with a 72-hole total of 279. The three-under-par windup enabled the veteran. topnotcher from Niles, III- to nip Clayton Heafner from Charlotte, N. C, by two strokes. Pete Cooper, who started the last 18 like Haefner with a stroke advantage over Man gram, strug gled into third place with 282. The Ponte Verda, Fla, pro went stroke over par in his finale. The tall, dark and suave Man- grum was the only one , of seven leaders going into the home stretch to break par. His 72-hole total was nine strokes better than par for the Mount Pleasant course. The beer-barreled Haefner, on the other hand, had a struggle with the links made soft and llougher by an overnight rain in contrast to the sun-baked ground of the first three rounds. Playing two holes ahead of Man- grum, the last in the field of about 60 to go round, Haefnes. fought hard to match par 72, his third straight such score. : Mangrum started his real bid yesterday with a : resounding 67 that pulled him from seventh place to runner-up. Before that he had unspectacular but consistent rounds of 71 and 72. The victory : moved Mangrum Into fourth place among golfs leading money winners with 818, 030, ahead of Jimmy Demaret who sat out this week. - . ueamers second place was worth SL900. Aaaclea Wade. Woods fhony (I) and Dapper;, Muncrief noYomey. and Sacra iaatU man to ttl Evans. Gables ) Brown and Sneely. oio see eoo s 000 003 003 fid KaJmondU Sacramont iaatU S00 400 0-4 IS. 1 80S 013 -S U Llerman. Cables (lk Gumbert (41 and Steinen Kindsfather. netebw (1. I. -Darla (4). Schana tT) and W; Look and Learxi X - By A. C. Gordon 1 What la that Kanr of a Hd- nid into vapor at ordinary tem- rkraturM railed? , . highest peak in the U. S, com- (MIC XXI UOtUi W1U1 IaC3t 3. Who was the first U. S. presi- . dent to ride on a railroad train! . wnat common zooa on every . table contains two of the deadli est poisons? 3. What very small animal caus es milk, and -fruit tukes to sour? t , xxti . n nnij L' Evaporation. 2. It is about one-half as high n as MLi Everest, which Is 23441 - 3. Andrew Jackson, on Juno 8. 1833, on the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad. ' ' .- - 4. Salt, conxisticg el sodium and Don Rogers Loses To Eddie Chavez EUREKA, Califs Aug. 20 -(ff)- Edaio Chavez, 136, of San Jose, Ca-UX, won a 10-round decision over Don Rogers, 136, Portland, gre-last night In the four-TOund semi-windup. Georges Parmentier, 222, Eureka, dedsioned Jimmle Byrnes, 214, of Portland, Ore. TAKES CANADIAN TITLE QUEBEC, Aug. 20 Doris Popple of Spokane, Wash, play ing in the Canadian tennis cham pionships for. the first time, won the women's singles title today by defeating Barbara Knapp of Eng land, 8-6, 6-8, 7-5. Brendan Mack en ox Montreal won the men s crown by routing: the defending uuist, Henri Rochon, also of Mon treal, 6-0, 6-0, 6-3. Table of Coastal Tides ' Tides for Taft. CTegon. August. 1S50 (compiled by UJS. Coast Geodetic Surrey. Portland. Oregon). .... ratio Standard Ttaae HIGH WATERS LOW WATERS Aug. . Time - Ht. Tttne fit 14 731 am. 0J3 pan. 13 sat. . T3 pa. 10:11 ia t:23 pm. 111 pan. S 'S pan. 11:44 i 10 XS I U:l 114 pan. U.-iS PJDB. 13:15 1:1 11:5S 1:40 1H3 , 3:14 PJB. 3 OS sjn. 3:41 pas. 4J 0.3 4J S.7 4J SJ 4J S4 t a S.4 So) -SJ s.t as 4J 0.0 as SJ S.4 sa 1353 11:49 M a a. 17 rjn. 3:13 am. 33X pjn. 4:is 3HS pj : 4:43 pan. OS SJ SJ -0J 0J . SJ) -IS SJ S:4 aan. . .14 M nan. ZJ 4 as aanw 0J 403 pa. U T.-00 a on. 74 pan. t Jl aan. 141 pan. 1J St aan. OJ 8 J gun. 1 J SJ1 aan. 14 .4 1J 0.1 Fucbs Breaks Record Again VISBY, Sweden, Aug.. 20 -WV Jim Fuchs of Yale cracked his own unofficial world record for the 16- pound shot today when he heaved the orin ball 58 feet, 9 964 inches. The husky collegian has been aiming for the 60-foot mark and today's mighty toss came within 13 Inches of his goal The listed world record of 58 feet, inch was set by Charley Fonville of Michigan in 1948. But Fonville'a mark has been bettered several times by the Yale strong man. Fuchs best heave un tu today was a as 3Vi inch record-smasher at Los Angeles, April 29. This throw is up for world rec ognition. Last Thursday Fuchs hit 58 feet. 4 2764 Inches. The day before that ho reached 58 feet, 3 1932 inches but that throw didn't count for the records as it was made at the con elusion of a two-day track meet between Sweden and America, Funihaslii Snaps Another Record KURE, Japan, Aug. 20 -P- Ja pan's famed ."flying fish,- mro- noshln Furuhashi, swam the 500 meter freestyle today In 5 min utes, 55 Jt seconds, cutting seven- HiebertTakes LITTLE ANNIE EOOKEY t xIx.-PMTli I a" f 't-t 7T asfl fir SPPC'., .W n&ir, tt. jzmsmwj 1 1 mm tTi,iraBJrninmri h uaL. rx if i i rjr.rai 111 ( iu aj f r.l 111 UU 1 I FANCY-ULK AM STUFF KIN VM f EASYRXXMEBUTNOBOOVV toft I KIN FDOLZERO-ANTTHEtl Bttl I WAY 2B ACTSv jr fttl r UKEtM.TQO-BUT THEYlREAlL SO BJG AN TM SO SMALL-IT MAKES ME FEEL K1NU4 STRANGE AN MtXED IP AIL THE TIME - Hitting Crown Marv Hiebert, softy king of swat for most of the second half, hung onto his slim lead as the season closed, statistics compiled by dty league director . Jim Dimit and Fred Minifi showed Sunday. The Fapermaker clipper closed the season with a .328 average on 14 hits in 43 trips to, the plate. He had seven runs batted in. Johnny Hoff ert, one of the principal rea sons for Campbell Rock Wool success, followed in second place witn .319. . Golden Pheasant' Alley had the most hits with 17 and also led in RBIs on an even dozen. He was fourth in the batting column with .315 average. Blanton of the Salem Supper club put in the most ap pearances at the plate 63. Twenty players In the league who saw regular action hit above the .200 mark for the season. Flayer AB H Bbt Pet. noDm, I'M - 43 14 nan en. raw , Carrow. PM Alley. GP Weaver, PM Debow. GP Warren. PaC Maddy. PM Mcaforria. CRW Staats. SCB Torgeroon, 13th McCaOery. CRW Hendrie. SSC RefxuJs. SSC j W enfer, GP Lowe. RO Potarson. SCB Blanton. SSC Marshall. CRW VaadcTTort. PM 7 V V f UT 111 mnrnm wkx 1 tX mwvuuv or 1 SU&VOUVASMC0TO6CT SOM PAPERS FTCM THE kFsrmER oil uwitx, tn TLuro$Soir.tccxt TIS KEY TO Mi OFFICE AND TIE COnWUnTKM TO V& SaTT, H15 WIPE SEVT THEIA TO YOU. BUZZ SAWYER a I J mi WMl TOT r WCHEO KOT" AND bX ST THE ITX1CS. A sr nr 47 41 S4 50 58 33 58 13 13 17 14 IS s 14 SI 13 48 11 . 48 . 87 rss . 83 , 87 . 38 . 43 .S3 . 4S SI 11 13 13 11 13 a t 13 10 40 7 9BK MICKEY MOUSE 0 IT MIL BE PMiftEKOUS? tho posstmy x cam reip Y0UEVATETMEIA.1K 6, Wia YOU HELP TIT UWYETC WFE MR) CKlPftN ESCAPE THE COUNTRY? tT WILL TAKE 10, 000 KZ0UEK. If I CAM exTTnotr r7PKSV SHElt WWf TWICE .10,000 KK3RZ tenths of a second off the world record. John MarshaH, the Australian Yale man, finished second in 5:37 flat after setting the pace for the first 400 meters of the exhibition. Ford Konno, 17-year-old Amer ican-Japanese from Hawaii, was third, ten meters behind MaraKaTt, m. (fa TO WEARVXlCCWr, I ... ,aV. SBBaaSt . .7 i UESt i. , CU ARB INSULTING ArtR. RAMTEO, WILXJNGLV KIR3YI Z OEMArO AM 7 Z 6P0KS AS Z DID AP0L09rM AND AM ONLY ESC40E2TWH EXPLANATION I S T1AA8 HAS COMB PCR PRAMCNF9 BETWS4 Z2 VW k .aasaf) r if 1 l AJST TELLMXl STOP! VOJ ABC AetXTTTP COUNT BSNARCS- J S4Y THAT YOO WENT TO VCr FINANCES AND LBARMBO THAT Wl I Z AMCCMPLSTELY ft PCMJILCSSt' mmT- I f'inUI' "V 1 - (Centinned from preceding page) Glenn Bnrrighi exalted ruler f Salem Elks 336, says next pre Ject el the ledge tn the sports field win be a State Elks trap- v sheet meet. May be made tnte an annual affair.' . . . Jethroe Said Fastest They are net yet comparing the Beete-a Brave Saa Jethroe' to Ty Cobb, Max Carey and the conple or three other great base stealers of history bat they may in another season or two. Jethroe leads the base theft department . la tho majors .by a bix margin in this, his rookie year and he Is doing- so by virtue of nothing els bast. sheer speed. . . . As Billy Sonth worth, Jethrec's man ager, says: "If s a tribute to Saa that through that speed alone he . leads tho base stealers. When ho develops smile and some el the eunnlng of Cobb to go wtta his swiftness ho is bound to move cp U a level wiih the greats of an me.". . Veteran hascba3 men opine that Jetlree Is tho fastest man they have ever seen on tho base paths. ... Fortunes Chaa lege feotban yon are tho for a stream of aspiring prep I stars. A good year on tho grid Is Just what the doe ordered in way of getting a talented supply of talent. Oregon'a Webfeet had themselves a nifty season a couple I of years ago.' It was a sugary year for Jim Aiken and company The Ducks success enabled them to corral tho bulk of the high school talent the following fall. Bat fortune . has not been so sweet to the Aikens since then. The wins haven't come as regul arly and neither has the talent. .. . . This fan Oregon State Is go ing to get a major share of the pre paters about tho state simply because tho , Beavers football star Is rising. Add to that a eer - tsis amount af aCura brought la by these Michigan AU-Americans, tho ElUott boys. And these sasBo ESIotts are proving pretty fair ambassadors of goodwill for I - tho Orange. . . . Somebody asks: TThat Is this fiatUe yacht tour ney held up at Victoria recently? TThat Is a flattie yacht, anyhowT PsJL wo wondered the same thing when the story came In. For your benefit and ours we'll took tt up s" It was lSo you left the (monotonous air I Hi-Lite cafe and" V the boss was I came here, Rjdge. ) persnickety. Arr That's swell but J he was always ALLEY ktH .SOLES He expected me to malce flrstdass dishes out of thirds class rruitenaJs. He padded the broken dish ecount arr criticised my personal naotts. f J Ma I All thoscTS wanted reasonsya chancy I 77 YE COULD AT LEAST YE fiEEDMT 6IT CURTSY, M12 SM!F ( .:. SO ALL-FIRE0 WHEN TH' MAYOR V UPPrTY, OFHOOTIN'HOLLER 71 RIDDLES' WALKS PAST GOOGLE U 1(11 i I WEUER HEERE0 TELL OF NO MAYOR WALKJN' AROUND BAREFOOTED AS fi YARD DOG .kai . . . i5 "1 . f r:vsETn:y chloride. i. Bacteria. SS pan. OJ yon are a w laser La col sometime. ... I t