11 I'M if' Al UlDnckson Banks on Youth Husky Oarsmen Point For Olympic Trials SEATTLE Al Ulbrickson, the dour admiral of the Washing ton navy, is putting his chips on youth in pointing his 1952 crew for an Olympic bid. Six oarsmen out of the 1951 University of Washington nation al champion freshman boat were manning sweeps Tuesday in the Tarsity shell. Nary a man off the '52 varsity was pulling an oar in the No. 1 boat. Even the coxswain, Bob Witter, was a sophomore and Ulbrickson Is a coach who likes to have a voice of experience at the tiller. There's no guarantee and no word from Admiral Al that the head man will stick to the young sters, but last year's results the nationals at Marietta, Ohio, might offer a tipoff. Fresh Finished First Ulbrickson's varsity was edged out of first by Wisconsin, his jun ior varsity took second behind Cal ifornia, but his freshman eight put on a hot finish to win the green ling race by a quarter-length over Massachusetts Institute of Techno logy. The youngsters will have to con vince Al they deserve to stay in their varsity slides, and they'll have lots of competition froro the oarsmen in the three other boats in Ulbrickson's armada. For the first time in several years Seattle will not have a chance to see the Washington crew In action on home water. The schedule calls for a dual clash with California May 17 on the Oakland estuary, a battle with the country's best in the nationals June 21 at Syracuse, N. Y.. and the 2,000 me ter Olympic trials July 2-4 at Wor cester, Mass. Montana Miss Leads Divoters PHOENIX, Ariz. UP) - Miss Edean Anderson, six times Mon tana State champion from Helena, captured medalist honors with a par 75 Tuesday as nearly 200 women amateurs battled through the qualifying round of the annual Trans-Mississippi Golf Tourna ment at the Arizona Country Club. Miss Anderson, winner of many sectional laurels, put together 39 36 75 rounds for the 6537 yard par 38-37 75 course. Match play gets under way Wednesday. The defending champion, Mary Ann Downey of Baltimore, quali fied but had to settle for a 39-42 8!. Runner-up for the medalist hon or was attractive Mrs. Lyle Bow man of Richmond, Calif., a four time Oregon State champion when she lived in Portland. Her card read 36-4076. Tied at 79 were Grace DeMoss of Corvallis. Ore., and Dorothy Stamps, Oakland, Calif. Printing inks are mixtures of pigment and a varnish. ikl - ' " s ' ' ' 1 1 " . TheyH Do It Every Time i low oaves rr? N this agz UKfi THIS CAM BOTTLE, CAR LABCL AHD PACK 0,500 CASES OP BttjGCWATER $OOA POPPER HOUR, AUTOMATlCALXy EUMNAWG 746 LieORESS ByJImnTmoo' 332 TO i XUT IT TAKES UMPTEEN j ADIO ANNOUNCERS TO EVEN GET THE &LGE I YKTER PBOGDAiA CTBcmA vnf I He AIR THE TIMC SS- I M OiiGentxre TIME ICS OiKji "-rTTvpt 'L- -ro V-V , M . . ft ft MB u r ktfcC' AVa Mia NO BUBBLE (o : AND NOW OURSTARS. AND ULSER, &LGEWATER 4-Z C'r "- 'WO WATVttS SrHPICATTL I Softball Lights Drive Reaches $1375, Vital Session Thursday A contribution from the Capitol Shopping Center merchants, amounting to $150, Tuesday brought ' the fund total In the Salem Softball Association's arc lamp drive to $1375, it was an nounced by Association President Ed Randle. The softballers have about five weeks to reach the goal of $3500 needed to equip the new field at Bush Pasture with lights for sum mer play this summer. An organizational meeting Is slated for room 109 at the senior high school Thursday night at 7:30 and at this time another report will be made on the progress of the drive. Randle has given warning that the support of all in the softball ranks is needed if the lights drive is to go over the top. He adds that it is vitally important for as many softballers as possible to be pres ent at the Thursday session. "Thus far." says Handle, the load in this drive has been carried by far too few. If everybody doesn't get together on the thing the goal may not be reached and there'll be no night softball this summer." Team and player registrations In both Major and Industrial Leagues will be made Thursday night and all clubs planning to enter either of these circuits are urged to have representatives present. Suds 6, Stars 3 HOLLYWOOD (-Charlie Schanz outpitched Johnny Lindell Tuesday night as Seattle's defend ing champions opened the Pacific Coast League season with a 6-3 victory over the Hollywood Stars. Schanz granted only seven hits and all the Hollywood runs were unearned. The Rainiers combed Lindell for 1 1 hits. Six errors, three by each team, led to five unearned runs. Seattle 030 010 110 6 13 3 Hollywood 000 012 000 3 7 3 Schanz and Wilson; Lindell and Sand-lock. BACK CONFINES CASANOVA EUGENE (JP) Lea Casanova, Oregon football coach who went to California on a speaking tour, wound up in a hospital. An old jack ailment recurred while he was near Redwood City, the sports department learned here. He is scheduled to start football training here April 14. Heinrich Sharp In Hiiskv Drills m SEATTLE (P - A small army of men answered Coach Howie Odeli's first spring football prac tice call at the University of Washington Tuesday but most at tention, was focused on the man who wasn't there last fall. He was Don Heinrich, All America back whose injured shoulder kept him off the playing field all through the 1951 cam paign. Observers said his performance Tuesday was like the old Hein rich. He was tossing the ball far, fast and accurate apparently solving the quarterbacking prob lem and making up in great part for the loss of another All-America Hugh McElhenny, who grad uated. In all, 83 men signed the spring roster. 120 PAIRS OIILY Absolutely guaranteed. Here Is a Fishing Boot that has all the features you like. Made of first quality rubber. Light but not too light to sacrifice durability. A Boot that will stand up under stream, lake, or surf fishing longer than any other Boot you ever wore. First quality, lightweight Gum Rubber "k Vulcanized never-leak .seams, full net lining Reinforced triple thickness loot double thickness ankle if Full cushion insole lor day long comfort BOBBER FISHHIG BOOTS (o) Beg. $13.95 Extra rugged, fire cleat ed, non-sldd sole Inside snap harness at knee, top snap adjustment for snug overflow protection Full length sporting tops, rubber belt strap GLASS FLY BOD k Genuine hollow glass, fully guaranteed k Two piece construction ,A price within reach of everyone if Light yet powerful action that handles HDH or D line CHQC Thread locking reel seat Li A $14.95 Value Glass Casting Bod k Genuine solid glass k Fast action, whippy Guaranteed perfect k Cork grip handle k Chrome guides Reg. $7.93 Kids Special k 3-pc steel rod T length A "Mill Creek" natural k Chrome ferrules and gulde9 Buy now i and serve Reg. $2.95 REG. $3.75 TAPERED HDH OR HCH FLY LINE 4.95 REG. $11.00 SHAKESPEARE "WONDEREEL" 0.95 REG. $8.50 AUTO. FLY REEL. FREE STRIPPING 495 REG. 5c SNAP SWIVELS, ALL SIZES Dos. .35 REG. 10c SPLIT SHOT SINKERS .02 REG. $15JW GLASS SPINNING ROD . G.95 REG. $254)0 SHAKESPEARE GLASS FLY ROD 19.50 REG. 45c SNELLED HOOK, SIZES 10, 11, 12 .19 REG. $1.95 NEEDLE NOSED PLH3L FOR FISHERMEN REG. $1.00 SPORT CAPS. ALL STYLES. COLORS REG. $3.95 SPLIT BAMBOO FLY ROD. eYx-TT .99 .59 5.45 NCAA Boxing Meet Thursday MADISON, Wis. (A)-A two ses sion, 35-bout card will open Na tional Collegiate Athletic Associa tion boxing tournament here Tues day. The 15th annual test of the year for the nation's top collegiate box ers will be held at the University of Wisconsin fieldhouse, with semifinals Friday night and finals Saturday night. Winers in the 10 weight classes two were added to the usual lineup to conform to Olympic di visions qualify for U. S. squad trials at Kansas City this sum mer. Seventy - five boxers, largest field in history, have been quali fied by the NCAA committee for this tournament. They represent 19 schools. Opening round and quarter-final matches will be held Thursday afternoon and night. Ml 1 White Sox Ready to Launch Bid in American League Race By GATLE TALBOT PASADENA, Calif. - Since year ago it has been considered a risky business, like blowing oil wells, to try to put s finger on the Chicago White Sox under Manager ; Paul Richards. Paul told anyone who would listen all last spring that he had a club capable of causing trouble in the Amer ican League. Few of the experts listened with more than one ear, and they! later suffered acute em barrassment when Paul drove his speedy crew to the top and kept them there 41 days. They fell back eventually, but they still finished in fqurth place, only 17 games off the pace and in front of the Detroit Tigers. Now it'a come time to try to solve the Richards vonders again, and it can only be said that opinion was widely divided as they left training camp here and began beating their way back home. Seme Do, Some Don't Some smart baseball men do not think they look as good as they did a year ago, that they have lost some of the initial spark im parted by their har,d-driving man ager. Others say they cannot help being a better club, considering the strength added during the winter. Richards is convinced he has Improved, that he has at least an outside chance of taking it all. He feels his pitching staff has been bolstered by the acquisition of Chuck Stobbs from the Boston Red Sox, Al Widmar from the St. Louis Browns and Marv Grissom from Seattle, where he had a fine 20-game year with a flag win ner. Hal Brown, another Seattle import, won 16. Hot Corner Fight Third base appears to have been stabilized by the purchase of Hec tor Rodriguez, another speed mar chant, from Montreal. He hit .302 for the Royals and stole 26 bases. Hector has been no ball of fire to this point, but scouts who saw him last season say the Cuban will do. Sam Dente, obtained from Washington, has been looking great at the corner and threatens to give Rodriguez a tussle. ! The important thing seems to ; be that Richards will be able to j let the sensational Minnie Minoso i concentrate on the left field job. where he feels more at home than at third. In Minoso and Center fielder Jim Busby the Sox claim they have the fastest outfielders in the game. Lollar to Help X third department in which Richards feels he has strengthen ed since the '31 race ended Is catching. In Sherman Lollar, trad ed from the Browns, he picked tip an experienced receiver and oc casional long ball hitter the lat ter something the club badly needs to team with veteran Phil MasL Chico Carrasquel, the hero of all Venezuela, will remain pos sibly the greatest fielding short stop in the game today, rivalled in that respect only by Phil Riz zuto of the Yanks. It is hoped he will hit better than his .264 of last year. At second there is young Nel lie Fox, whose amazing .313 bat ting mark last year was second on the club only to Minoso's .326. The question arises whether iuch an other season as that can be ex pected from the 24-year-old flash. All the Sox believe it can. RebhMOB Back Ed "Robinson, who played IS games at first last year and swat ted 29 homers, xives the club noth ing much to worrv about at thai position, though Robinson scarce ly is the gazelle some of his team4 mates are. j - Al Zarilla and Ray Coleman sxtt principal candidates for the third outfield post. - If Most observers think it wQi come down to pitching, as It us4 ually does. Southpaw Billy Fierce who turned in 15, wins last year can be counted upon as m wheels horse, but there are skeptics whqS doubt that Saul Rogovin will match his 12-8 record. : J Back of them there 1 are Ker) Holcombe, a hard worker with at) 11-12 mark; veteran Joe DobsonL who skidded to 7-6 and had his salary cut. and such iinrrtinti as Lou Kretlow and Harry Dos isn. Luis Aioma, the teams relief i specialist, posted a 6-0 necord last year after appearing in '23 same. It will require some great pitchf er-nananng Dy Klcnards to houf me sox in uie iirst division. Look and Learn By A- C Gorsoa 1. Who are the only three Americans, who did not serve as Presidents, to have their pictures on U.S. bills?, 2. What is Europe's longest river? What are the oldest architectur al structures in the world? 4. What is an isosceles triange? 5. What is the standard gauge of an American railroad track? ANSWERS 1. Benjamin Franklin, Alexan der Hamilton, and Salmon P. Chase. 2. The Volga: 2,293 miles long. 3. The Pyramids of Egypt. 4. A triangle with two sides of equal length. 5. Four feet, eight and one-half Inches. Decks Cleared for Big Classic delays Entrants to Aim At Snappy '51 Records When the approximately 2,000 high school and college athletes congregate at McCulloch Stadium Saturday for the second annual Willamette Relays cinder carnival they'll have to go some to neat snappy early-season marks set up at the inaugural meet last year. One of the better performances Waltons Slate Walker Speech Capt. Bert Walker of the State Police will be the principal speaker tonight during the regular meet ing of the Salem chapter, Izaak Walton League meeting at the Clubhouse. The meeting is sched uled for an eight o'clock start. Walker has always been cooper ative and helpful in I-Walton work, and according to Secretary Eino Seta la likely will have the answers to numerous important questions concerning preservation. Also on the program tonight is the showing of a moving picture by Clayton Jones of the South Salem Betterment Club. He will show the film on his trip of last summer, a jaunt from here to Alaska via the Alcan Highway. Refreshments will be served following the meeting. Table of Coastal Tides Tide for Tan. Oregon. April. 1952 (complied by U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey, Portland. Oregon). Parlflc Standard Tim HIQH WATERS IX) W WATERS ! April Time Ht. Time Ht. ! 1 5. IS a.m. 5 3 j 8:14 pjn. 4 5 1:08 pjn. 0.8 ' S 8:29 a.m. 3.3 1:01 a m. 3.3 i 9 KM pjn. 4.7 2 08 pjn. 0.8 4 7:42 am. 53 2:20 a.m. 3.2 8:43 pjn. 5 0 2:59 p m. 0 6 ; 8:46 a.m. 5.3 3:19 a m. 2 3 1 10:18 pjn. 5 3 3:42 pjn. 0.8 of the '51 show was the 225-foot 114 inch toss made by Chuck Missfeldt, University of Oregon ace. The toss was one of the best made in the country last season and Missfeldt will be back this time trying to improve on the mark. Another good mark was the 6' 4" high jump made by Jim Miller of Oregon State. Uoyd Dickey, the Northern Division's top pole vault man, leaped 13 feet in the first Relays and is due back to go after 14 feet, which he has done. The man to beat in the college 100-yard dash invitational go is another Oregon State, Merv Brock, possessor of a 9.8 figure in the 1951 Relays. Best discus effort in the last one was the 148 foot, 1 iftch toss made by Oregon's Bill Anderson. Among the better high school marks in the '51 Relays was Bob Reid's 4:35 mile for Estacada High School, his 2;04.5 in the half-mile and Bob Bodorek's 5" 11" high jump for Klamath Falls. The huge meet is scheduled to open a close-to-five hour run at 1 o'clock Saturday afternoon. The affair is scheduled to finish up at 5:50, Tickets at 90 cents for adults and 50 cents for students, will be available at the McCulloch gates. Jefferson Nips Stayton Tossers STAYTON -(Special)- Jeffer son's Lions pushed over a run in the seventh inning on an error Tuesday afternoon to nose out the Stayton Eagles 5-4 as the teams opened the 1952 campaign. Lee Cameron and Jim Blackwell com bined to hold Stayton to five blows while the Lions were getting sev en off Darwin Fehlen and Jim Hatch. Cameron fanned nine, Blackwell whiffed five, and Fehlen struck out eight. Jefferson 020 002 15 7 2 Stayton 000 300 1 4 5 2 Cameron and Blackwell (5) and Brown; Fehlen, Hatch (7) and Hinrichs. BONNEVILLE FISH COUNT: PORTLAND (JP)-The upstream movement of fish past Bonneville Dam: Friday 44chinook, 27 steelhead; Saturday 4 chinook, 7 steelhead; water very muddy. Sunday 2 chinook, 3 steelhead; very muddy water. Beavers Lick Vanport Nine CORVALLIS (iirVOrefion State College pounded out its fourth coi secutive win of the baseball sea son Tuesday, thumping Vanport. 16-3. j Jay Dean, freshman first base man for Oregon State-, walloped la home run in the second Inntnjg; with one man on base; ! j. Al Goedhard started on tha mound for Oregon State, then Ut Ralph Coleman Jr. take over lb the seventh inning. It was the-first appearance for Coleman, son of the Oregon State baseball coach. They gave up only four hits: Vanport. Central U-Driva Truck Service Corner 12th and Slat Vans. SUkes. P.U. FOR BENT Phone 2-S0&2 ' When water freezes it gets more bulky, reversing the usual rule that matter expands on being heated and contracts when cooled. STRAWBEBBIES WANTED MARSHALLS and NORTHWEST We arc now contracting for immediate planting. Plenty of plants available. KELLEY FARQUHAR & CO. 1450 Tile Road P ho na Ed. Sh now, 2-4133 ttit i W off mMq for P w MBSf 9 Wbll admit that the price tags of automobiles all automobiles aren't what they used to be. But it's just as true today as ever before that some price tags are lower than others, and some cars cost less to own than others. So let's see how a Buick Special fits into the picture. Take first cost. If you put the price tag of this Buick against price tags of cars that have always been tagged as belong ing in "the low-priced fieldf you'll find that, in actual dollars, a Buick's surpris ingly close to these cars of lesser size and horsepower. j But that's just the beginning. What you're getting here is Buick quality this Special, comes down the same assembly line as Supers and R.O ADM ASTERS. Its heft tells you it has extra sturdiness in frame and structure. Its Fireball Engine delivers extra power. It is an eight, a valve-in-head, with high compression, and the miles you can get from a gallon of gas make it a thrifty performer. bu get Buick's Million Dollar Ride, which protects you and the car from jars and jolts. Even the tires are bigger which, any tire man will tell you, lengthens their wear. And if you pay a bit extra forDynaflow Drive you're easing the strain on the engine, the rear end, the tires and eliminating clutch repair bills. So when we talk about "mileage lot, your money" we're talking about the miles you'll get from your car includ ing the unused miles that are what you have to sell when you trade it in. Maybe that's why Buick's doing so well in the present market. Why not come in and see what a great car this is for you? MtMa-Sbna. Win i liwffi twtienmt mt W Stmmdurd n Roaomatw. pHnol mt mud 0m )r Sri Sure is frua for 52 ,aeaeaejiiiisftisHeiNBMiHeMBMBaisW Open Til 9 Every Iliio Open 'Til 9 Every Nile WiHiiHillllJ Phone 2-3621 388 North Commercial 3C