Angling Prospers 'ISSngQ From Fair to (ood PORTLAND (JP) - The weekly fishing report of the Oregon Game Commission: Northwest Fishing is fair in the Mt. Hood area and has im proved In The Clackamas River system In the Tillamook area trout angling is fair. The streams are low and a few bluebacks are being taken. Occasional Chinook are being caught in Nestucca Bay. All streams are low and clear and fishing is fair to good in the upper stretches of the Alsea and Siletz; sea -run cutthroats are being caught in Tidewater. Fishing on the McKenzie and its tributaries continues good. Willamette River is fair to good. Clear Lake is fair on troll and egg; Linton Lake is spotty and Dorena Reservoir is poor. Angling is fair and some sea run cutthroat are showing in Ne- Russ Olympics Squad Threat Reds Formidable Foe In Track Department (Continued from preceding page) was Anoufriev, who ran second be hind the Russian Vladimir Kazant- sev when both defeated Zatopek in Kiev a few weeks ago in the 5,000 Surprisingly, Kazantsev is en tered only in the 3,000 meter steeplechase in which he holds the best world mark ever. Nikifor Po pov, the Russian distance man, is competing in both the 8,000 and the 10,000 as is Anoufriev FeodossiJ Vanine, the veteran ZATOPEK AILING HELSINKI (JF) Word reached the Iron Curtain Olympics camp at Otanleml Thursday that Emll Zat opek, Czechoslovakia's world rec ord holder, who is entered in the 5.000 and 10,000 meter runs as well as the marathon, has to Mil itia and is well below top physical condition. distance runner from the Soviet Union, leads the marathon entries. Other known Russian names on the lists include the sprinter Vladi mir Soukharev in the 100 and 200. Soukharev is supposed to have done .10.2, equalling the world 100-meter record. Some Skeptical However, those who saw him run in Brussels two years ago in the European cnampionsnips say ne must have improved sensationally if that time is to be accepted. The great race of the Olympics, as many anticipated, shapes up in the 1,500, or metric mile. Entered re such names as: Relff, who also will run the 8,000; Willi Slijkhuis of Holland, one of the world's great runners; Roger Bannister and Bill Nanke ville of Britain; John Ross of Can ada; Audun Boysen of Norway; Patrick El Mabrouk of France; Sture Landqvist, Ingvar Ericsson and Olow A berg of Sweden; Guen ter Dohrow, Rolf Lambers and Werner Lueg of Germany (Lueg tied the world mark of S:43 re cently); Denis Johansson of Fin land, and Sandor inaros oi Hun gary. Kiser Matched With Pederson Jack (Tiger) Kiser, never any more spectacular or capable in his long mat career as he has been in recent weeks, gets the main event battle at the Armory next Tuesday night. Matchmaker Elton Owen has matched the blond dynamo with Eric (The Great) Pederson In the top mix, same stemming from the row Jack and the chesty Pederson got Into this week when Kiser was referring the Pederson-Buck Wea ver brawl. Sensing that he had the makings of a lively squabble between the two after they had to be separated from one another in the dressing room. Owen immediately got the pair signed up. Kiser disqualified Pederson for rough stuff used gainst Weaver, an item which caused the arrogant musculer to blow his fuse. Had not Owen and a couple of other wrestlers broken it up, the battle between Kiser and Pederson would have occurred in the dressing room. Never one to keep the fans from seeing a good thing, Owen lnsistea that they hold off their warfare until main event time next Tues day. The card's prelim will be added later. 49er Club Inks Ex-Beaver Star KLAMATH FALLS (JP) - Bob Red key, who was denied another season of play for the Oregon State College football team, signed Wednesday with the professional San Francisco 49 era. Redkey, a defensive standout at halfback for OSC, lost his appeal recently to the Coast Conference for another year of eligibility. Look and Learn By A. Cl Gere's 1. With what sport is each of these women associated: (a) Mau reen Connolly; (b) Babe Zaharias; (c) Florence Chad wick? 2. What country has the greatest railway mileage per capita? 3. What American humorist at tained the greatest International fame as a writer? 4. What are the "seta" of a cat? 5. What people eat the heartiest breakfasts? ANSWERS 1. (a) Tennis; (b) Golf; (c) Swimming. 2. Canada. 3. Samuel L. Clemens, better known as Mark Twain (1835 1910). 4. The whiskers. 3. Americans. canlcum and Nehalem Rivers and in tidewater. Southwest Rogue River trout angling is good and Improving above prospect but is only fair and improving from Grants Pass to McLeod. Good catches are be ing made on flies in the evening. Water continues to drop and is clear. Salmon angling remains good in the Bybee Bridge to Mc Leod area and is fair in the Grants Pass area. Chinook salmon ang ling closes in the Rogue River af ter July 15 above Mule Creek near MariaL Salmon fishing at Win chester Bay is poor. Trout fish ing in the central coastal lakes is fair with some catches being taken with flies, spinners and worms. Warm water fish are biting good with some good catches of cat fish. Trout angling has been good to excellent throughout the up Theyll Do It Every WELL, HERE WE ARC-UH-DOrT TELL ME VOU eROUGtfn P'n.ag c At Art TrtA I I X ALWAYS BWNG. "WE POTATO SALAD .V ME! hzhha just sad evERyaoo SUPPOSED TO BRlr43 FOOO-&4E DlOHT ePEOFy con, mt awa rtAXvaaa mcptctix, u, wemxp i Electricians, -Comers Lose eights', Junior 'IB' League Wins Orchard Heights climbed into a two-way tie for second place in the Junior "B" League diamond chase Thursday evening with a 9-3 verdict over Bishop Electric behind the two-hit hurling of Ron An derson. Another game resulted in a 13-7 win for Berg's Market over Four Corners. Orchard Heights, in getting its second win in three starts, sewed up its game with a six-run burst in the fourth frame off three walks, an error, singles by Ron Anderson and Gary Anderson and a double by Ron Baker. Fifteen walks helped Berg's lick Four Corners. The victors tallied 13 runs in the first three innings, big frame being the second when six tallies paraded across the plat ter. Rog Morley batted in three runs for Berg's and Bruce Buck ingham knocked in two. Gerald Basye collected a double and sin gle for the losers. John Corbett's single in the fourth was the first hit bagged by the Four Corners club this season They went hitless in two previous games. Berg's 463 00013 5 4 Corner 010 080 7 6 4 Morley, Chandler (3), Morley (0) and Puhlman; Basye, T Schrecengost (3) and K. Schrecen gosL Orch. Hts Bishops R. Anderson .010 6200 4 t ..120 0003 2 7 and Schwynock; Michaelis, Sohn (4), Newsome (6) and Ponsford. Aussie Olympics Gals Rebel Over Head-Pieces LONDON CSV-Australia's nine women Olympic stars staged a "mutiny" Thursday before they went to Buckingham Palace to meet Queen Elizabeth. They refused to wear the offi cial white leather hats Issued them. "They made us look like porky 12 -year-olds on a school treat, complained one of the athletes. The team arrived at the palace wearing trim white felt berets which the girls purchased for two pounds, two shillings ($3.88) each. Yost Eliminated In PNGA Action TACOMA 0P)-Bill Mawhinney of Vancouver blazed a four-under-par performance Thursday to lead quarter-finalists in the Pacific Northwest Golf Association Cham pionships. The former Canadian amateur champion eliminated Se attle's Carl Jonson. Defending Champion Jack West land of Everett earned a semi-final berth with a 3 and 2 sub-par win over Tacoma's Dr. Herman Dahl. Spokane's Al Mengert, 1950 PNGA titlist, defeated Dick Yost of Portland, 2 and 1, and Bruce Cudd, Portland, defeated Seattle's Clarence Smith by the same score. eih laleim ilesel ienzice 3775 Silvericn Iload COMPLETE REPAIRS ON ANY MAZE OR MODEL TRUCK SATISFACTION jGUARANTEED per Umpqua area. Ply fishing in the North Umpqua has Deen very good but the water is high al though clear. Some summer steel head have been caught in the Steamboat area and a promise of better catches is in the offing. Salmon and trout have appeared at Winchester Dam so it should be available to the angler below that point. Central Fishing has been slow in the central region due to hot weather. Road into Sparks Lake is blocked by snow at Dutchman Flat. Waldo Lake is still inacces sible. The road is open to Irish Lake. Deschutes River in Cow Camp area has been producing some nice catches on fly in the evening. Little Deschutes and Crescent Creek have been very good on flies. Blue upright and caddis flies seem to be the best Time eASy TO TELL 6PUDS ARE. CHEAP AND X WAS MOT 006$ COST GCXMS TO BRlMO TCO BAD WE CANPT USE. THAT A RIB-ROAST-BUT OOO "TO OIL TVtfL X "TUCXK3UT eooy would brino x ear WE UP REAL EARLY TO MAKE TT41S- STUFF LAST A MAVOWAiSE WELL- Berg's Nab Firemen Beat Postal Tossers The high flying Fire Department club chalked a 6-4 victory over the Postal Carriers Thursday in Industrial Softball League action and another game saw the Tele phones whip First Christian by a 10-3 count. One City League tilt is on tap tonight, that putting Randle Oil against the Teamsters at Leslie, 6 o'clock. A five-run seventh inning feat uring a grandslam homer by Reinke gave the Firemen their win over the Postal club. Billings contributed a triple to the big frame. Qiggs hurled two-hit ball as the Telephones bounced First Christian. Housely and Sergent clouted homers for the winners in the fourth inning. Telephones 120 223 010 16 4 1st Christian .... 000 002 1 3 2 8 Diggs and Rolfson; Brown and Tanner. Postal Car 010 010 2 4 5 4 Firemen 000 100 5 6 3 3 O. LeboJd, McLeod (5) and Gardner! Winkenwerder and Mc Caffery. ACRES FEATURE WON SEATTLE (P)-Don't Bone Me took an early lead and held on de spite pressure from Toploch In the stretch to win the featured race at Longacres Thursday. It was Don't Bon Mc's second straight win and worth $3,90, $3.00 and $2.70 Toploch returned $6.50 and 4.00 and Idol Doll, third, paid 4.50. LIGHT OLYMPIA BEER) QUENCHES THAT 1 LAWN-MOWING THIRST! BE SURE WEEK-END SUPPLY AT HOMEl MENUS Cft, IS.. mm in these areas. Mid-Deschutes in Cove, Mecca, and Trout Creek areas have all been producing nice catches. Odell Lake has been producing the big ones with 8 mac mnaw ranging from 10 M to 22 pounds reported this week. Also a few around 5 and 6 pounds were reported. Rainbow fishing at Odell continues good and a few blueback are still being caught Crescent Lake has been good this wee:, uavis Lake is reported good. On East and Paulina Lake r. mains fair on bait and trolL Lava Lake is improving. Metolius River is providing good fishin on flv Fly fishing with Blue Lake special coachman and gnats at Blue Lake is producing some nice catches of rainbow. Lower Deschutes River is lairly clear but still quite high. Trout fishing has been only fair. ByJImmy Hatlo WWEN ms ONLY RFTEEW MLLS CH A JAMMED WeMWAV TP TWC NEAREST MOT-OCXS A40ME GAR" BUT MERE THREW ENOUGH OF "THAT TtiCM dames M THE LAKE. ARE ALWAYS YEAR TD START CMBCtfMO eoss WrXU OME AttTTMERJ BUT AKyTVIINO PRACTICAL" NO rrm si PsoVfclG YOU CAW HAVE A FEAST AUDA F54MIME AT THE SAME JTkWX AhO A TIP TUB , HATLO HAT TO )) LOLA WlEOoCKT, 0O7 WATERLOO STC. LOS AKGCl.ES, CAUf. Anderson, Lesser Links Winners TACOMA (JP) - Women's play went according to form in the Pa cific Northwest Golf Association championships Thursday, but the Canadian Amateur champ and the Washington state titlist fell in men's second round battles. Edean Anderson of Helena, MonL, moved steadily in defense of the crown she won last year whipping Mrs. Al Puetz of Seattle 7 and 5, but her most serious challenger was right at her heels. This would be Patty Lesser of Seattle, who rubbed out Mrs. R. S Bigelow of Seattle and will meet Edean Friday in a semi-final tangle. REDSKINS SIGN PAIR WASHINGTON (vP)-The Wash ington Redskins of the National Professional Football League Wednesday signed two veteran linemen for another season. They are John Badaczewski, six feet one inch 255 pound guard from Cleve land's Western Reserve University and Paul Lipscomb, 257 pound six feet four inch tackle, who starred at Tennessee. R Unless otherwise specified, any Used Car advertised by a used ear dealer In The Oregon Statesman Thursday, Friday or Saturday can be bought for $600 or less down payment. READ Cougar Student In Semi-Finals Of Publinx Go MIAMI, Fla. (JP- A young Il linois laborer, a California sales man, a Washington State College student and a Florida airline pilot captured semi-final berths -Thursday in the wild and wooly Na tional Public Links golf tourna ment. The headliner in this field of the stars of American municipal golf courses was Bob Scherer, cool, 21-year-old workman from Decatur, 111., who knocked out Tommy Bean, tobacco-chewing ex-pro from Tnon, Ga., in a 1-up quar ter-final battle. Scherer, who aims for a profes sional golfing career and appar ently has the competitive instinct to fulfill his ambition, took an other long step in the right direc tion when he blasted Bean, his sixth victim of the week-long amateur marathon, and moved into Friday's 36-hole semi-final. Spokane Kid 'Warm' His opponent in that next-to- last test of one of golfs most se vere tournament grinds will be John Halin, 21 -year-old "cold weather kid" from Spokane. Wash- who came through the quarter-finals with a 2 and 1 de cision over Arnold Kaehler. 225- pound wholesale grocery sales man from Indianapolis. Matched in the other semi-final battle will be Omer L. Bogan, slender South Gate, Calif., furni ture salesman, who at 35 is the old man" of the public links classic, and Bob Kurz, 32-year-old Eastern Air Lines pilot of Miami Springs, Fla. Bogan cut out Dub Pagan. West Palm Beach, Fla., fireman, by a 2 and 1 margin in the quarter finals. Kurz scored an identical 2 and 1 victory over 18-year-old Donald Thornton of Los Angeles, the youngster of the quarter-final field. Buford Kahut Foe PORTLAND (TP) - Matchmaker Tex Salkeld announced Thursday that Frank Buford, Oakland heavyweight, will replace Dick Wagner as opponent for Joe Kahut in a 10-round bout at Prineville July 28. Wagner withdrew Wednesday, after his manager protested he was too small to fight heavy weights. Wagner has been fight ing middleweightf and light heavies. Buford and Kahut met once be fore, Buford winning a 10-round decision. Table of Coastal Tides Tides for Taft, Oregon. July, 1993 (compiled by V. S. Coast & Geodetic Survey, Portland. Oregon). Pacific Standard Time HIGH WATERS LOW WATERS July Time Ht. Time Ht. 11 I Jl a.m. 6 5 9:23 msn. -0 8 4:03 p.m. .l S:M pjn. 1.S IX 3:30 mxa. S.7 10:05 mm. -0.1 4:45 pjn. 6.1 11:05 p.m. 1.5 U 4:3S am- tit 10:48 .m. 0.7 5 JO pjn. S.4 14 9:94 un. 4 J 12:19 am. 1.1 8:15 pm. 3 11:34 a.m. 1.5 15 7 19 a J7i. sa 1:33 a.m. 0.7 7:04 p.m. 6.0 12:26 pm. i2 Central U-Drive Truck Servico Corner 12th and 8tate Tana, Stake. P.U. FOR RENT Phene 2-9t2 STJeVg EVERY CLASSIFIED ADI NOW IN OUR 102nd YEAR More Americans Arrive Olympic Truce' billed, Chinese Entry . banned By TED SMITS HELSINKI CP)-Finland proclaimed an Olympic truce in the style of ancient Greece Thursday in the hope the biggest athletic festival would go off smoothly. The games of the 15th Olympiad bringing together Russia and tne United States in direct sports conflict open July 19. Sixty nine nations have entered 6,500 athletes. Meanwhile, an unexpected dis pute broke out. Gunsun Hoh flew in from Formosa and demanded that Nationalist China be ad mitted. The International Olympic Committee previously ruled neith er Nationalist nor Red China could compete. Gunsun immedi ately sought a hearing with the Olympic brass here. Eighty more United States ath letes arrived Thursday morning with another plane winging in Thursday night. The fifth and last air contingent from New York is due Friday. Peaceful Interlude The call for Olympic peace was made by Erik von Frenckell, president of the Finnish Olympic organizing committee, speaking to the committee in the president's box of the sun-drenched Olympic stadium. "For the time that the games last, the organizers proclaim Ekekheiria, the Olympic truce," he said. In ancient days heralds sounded the truce and athletes were per mitted to travel unmolested to the games no matter what wars went on in Greece. One of the most exasperated of athletes was Don Laz, the 15-foot pole vaulter from Illinois. He broke his pole in the final tryouts and has not been able to duplicate it. The Swedish firm that made the metal pole has discontinued Don's particular type. Laz bor rowed a heavy pole from the Ger mans but couldn't make it work. Intent Scratched From 'Gold Cup' INGLEWOOD, Calif. MP) - The Brookfield Farm's handicap star, Intent, was officially declared out of the Gold Cup at Hollywood Park Saturday, an expected develop ment that automatically elevated the Calumet Farm's two mares, Two Lea and Wistful, Into the favorite's role as an entry In the $100,000 battle. About a dozen candidates will Oh, My Aching Back I Get SCHAEFER'S LINIMENT For the relief of muscular aches and pains due to exer cise or exposure. 50c, 1.00 & 1.75 SCHAEFER'S DRUG STORE 135 N. Commercial rannvy The Statesman, Salem, Savitt Heads Toward Crown CHICAGO (P) - Dick 8avitt. Orange, N. J., top seeded men's singles player In the national clay courts tennis championship tour nament, bowled over Harrison Bowles of Highland Park. 111., 6-1, 6-0, Thursday in rolling up his third straight set victory. Noel Brown, Los Angeles, rated as the dark horse of the tourna ment, also swept through the third round successfully by defeating Allen Cleveland, Santa Monica, Calif., 6-1, 6-2. Savitt and Brown became the first of an original field of 64 to enter the eight-player quarter finals starting Friday. Lightning Kills '51 Tnrf King UPPERVILLE, Va. (Jp) - Bold, victor in the 1951 Preakness, and a big money winner among three-year-olds last year, was struck by lightning and killed Wednesday at Die Brookmeade Stables here. The horse, owned by Mrs. Isa belle Dodge Sloane, was let out to pasture as usual at about 4 p.m. A sudden violent electrical storm came up almost immediately after that and an hour later a stable hand came upon the horse's body. race in the mile and one-quarter feature of the meeting. The first jewelry was fashioned, before recorded history, for divine protection and magic power. The Salem brewery paid, in 1951, $12, 700.00 for water and power. The first automobile was introduced in Sa lem in 1902, and by 1904 cars were being seen parked at the Fairgrounds, bringing their fortunate own ers and friends to the annual exposition. 1 rT c7 TUESDAY FID4y ' a)l Oregon, Friday, July 11, 19520 British Open (Continued from preceding page) Only CO-year-old Willie Hunter of Lot Angeles, winner of the British amateur crown 17 rears ago, failed to make the final grade. tie nnisnea with a 74-83-157. Willie Goggin of Montelair. N. J., took 71-74-145; Gene Sarazen or uermantown, N. Y., came in with 74-73-147, while Frank Stranahan of Toledo, Ohio, and Jimmy Hines of Chicago finished on the very bottom rung. Strana han. the only amateur in the four- some, posted 75-76-151 and Hines nad 73-78-151. Goffgin. Dlavinir in his first British open, was nine strokes ofi the pace and In ninth place. American Gunners Capture Honors OSLO (P)-The United SUtes carried off two individual crdwna and one team title in the 35th world shooting championships Thursday. H. W. Reeves of Detroit won the Individual center fire pis tol competition with a record total of 579 points and the U. S. team took the team title with 2304 points, also a record. A. C. Jackson, New York, won the small-bore, prone, rifle shoot but the U. S. team had to be con tent with a tie with Norway for second place as Switzerland com piled a world record of 1984 points. Why Just Watch h OrowT Cmon Help It Orowl Salem Senators Attendance w. w. R0SEBRAUGII CO. "Metal Products That Last Since 1912" TRUCK TANKS 680 S. 17th Phone 3-7609 Y To Date t i r 40.239 -"V