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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 3, 1953)
j ; ; IX 3c. 2 Stat man, Salrn, Or.. Wod.. Juno 3. US3 Stock Care Booked for Saturday Meet at Hollybowl s 1 ; DAILY AND SUNDAY The Nations Top Comics The stock cart return to Sa lem's Hollywood Bowl: for the next auto racinf program, the cominf Saturday night It will mark the second appearance of the local season for Dodges, Ply mouths, Oldsmobiles, Mercuries, Fords, Hudson, etc., and Pro motor Henry Ireland of the Val ley Sports (organization antici pates another thrill-filled card. In their first appearance the stocks produced a fine show, one of the best for stock cars in Holly-bowl history. There were 22 of them on hand I oif that meet, and Ireland expects around the same number again. Veteran driver Royce Hagerty won the first main event here in a 19S2 Ford. It was a 50-lap event Second was Ray Gericke in a 1049 Plymouth, third was Ray Elliott in his 1853 Dodge Red Ram, and fourth was Johnny Kieper in his 1931 Hudson Hornet All will be among the pilots Saturday night Saturday's card will start with time trials at 7:30 p.m., after which will follow a Trophy dash and a series of heat races. The Class A main event will be a 75- lapper, which is 29 laps .more than the 50 of the first race. Ireland will have the complete list of cars and driven later in the week. Herschel McGriff wont be among them this time, for he will not have returned from the in Your Home Newipiper Indianapolis "500" classic by Sa turday. McGriff went to Indian a polls to see the big race, as one day he hopes to drive in it sP They'll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo ira s .-- in 7m : .... ' -iiC r , i WMmilL YOU'RE RtCHT-j hR8 HERCS Aj f CVSSWOOQ Ijl I NO MOPC I PALS 14 I'M AFPAIO k , CVSCWOOCU Vj?s S!NT 5tJ N,CeJ SENSR-eSS S ' 0THE THIS IS COINS I 3 - J s g Drill May Get Gate PCC May Also Junk Freshman Schedules SEATTLE UPi The Pacific Coast Conference may do away entirely with spring football practice and m - "X. J Ma x x ur m nn ifti 11 a JUST RELAX jerxvll! YJUATSCDMS. C3VERM3U? I WT AAF UP DOeStfTUKESOfHS- TOOK 7Hr 4 Ktui-uscw vr- - wm PGtCHCLOGJl TO.PRAqiCE 0t rr -sc imoe f VUnilDJIie uieuuics iur ucauiiiw grid teams at its spring meeting here next week. Those two suggestions are on the agenoV alang with discussion of television problems and arranging the 195 football schedule. Athletic, Director Harvey Cassill of the Uni versity of Washington said Tues day night. Last year the conference decided to cut spring practice to 20 days and that was the program for the 1953 workouts. If adopted, said Cas sill. the proposed rule would prob ably extend to out-of-season prac tices for all sports. Freshman teams now are permit ted to compete in a regular sched ule. If this was banned, the frosh footballers would do nothing but practice on their home field, as is the program in the Western Con ference Big Tea). . The 195 football slate will put eight of the member schools ex cepting only Idaho on a round robin program as voted at the cir cuit sessioa last winter. Slates up to that year were set previously. Conference faculty athletic repre sentatives will gather for theses sion Sunday, with the first business sessions to start Monday. The meet ing will run through Thursday, June Northern Division representa tives will hold a preliminary meet ing Saturday to discuss next sea son's basketball schedule! JCRKVLLff RAD ' pRDB4Bty SHOULD BE RTKAINEO-, ON US 2 ToeoamxxLix. PATEJiTS THE S0WOMOR2 h tkvi-uwk&i A 7V OF" J THQMAMMLLe. ,Af.C Women's Play In 3rd Round Third round play in the Wom en's Spring Handicap Golf Tourn ament at the Salem Course will take place today. Semifinals ac tion will be held Wednesday, June 10. Pairings for today's round: Championship Flight Mrs. Ber nard! vs. Mrs. Marble and Mrs. MacLaughlin vs. Mrs. Lama. First Flight Mrs. McDevitt vs. Mrs. Allen and Mrs. Huff vs. Mn Wil bur. Second filgbt Mrs. Shafar vs. Mrs. Anunsen and Mrs. Ports vs. Mrs. Johnson. Third flight Mrs. Adolph v Mrs. Perry and Mrs. Chase vs,: Mrs. Steelhammer. Fourth flight Mrs. Hill vs. Mrs. Williams and Mrs. Dyer vs. Mrs. Cannon. Fifth Flight Mrs. Goul et vs. Mrs. Haworth and Mrs. Roth vs. Mrs. Krueger. Champ m Kill T M?JX This is Bob Atkinson, Portland golfer who attends the U ef Oregon and who Sunday won the championship flight in the Third Annnal Salem Shrine Club crippled children's hospi tal benefit tourney. Atkinson holds the trophy emblematic of the title. CLEMO SUSPENDED BUTTE, Mont. UH Joey Clemo. Portland. Ore!, was suspended for six months by the Montana Boxing Commission Tuesday for failure to fight Basil Marie, Philadelphia. The lightweight fight had been Future Spprtsmen'll Find Fish, Game Less, Says Wildlife Head LONG BEACH. Calif. UP Sports men of the future will have to con tent themselves with less fish and game, a meeting of wildlife officials was told Tuesday. Dr. Ira N. Gabriclson, president of the Wildlife Management Insti- J) . tute of Washington, D. C. said the number of hunters and fisher men is growing much faster than game and fish management can provide' for them. djr. Gabrielson presided at a sympoisum held in connection with the 33rd annual conference of the Western Association of State Game and Fish Commissioners. ' He said the number of license holders in the United States has more than doubled in the last 10 years. Last year 13 million hunt ins licenses and IS million fishing licenses were issued. BUTTERMILK HOT CAKES With Hot Maple Syrup and Wbipi Butter CjJ Tf Legions Start Action Sunday (Continued from preceding page) Stephens, possessor-of good pow er; Fred Bolton, Ray-Kronser and Bob Foreman. There would appear to be the makings of some good hit production on this current team. The big question is the pitching. The other hill candidates in ad dition to Beck and Loy and John ny Frederick, Ron Anderson, Ga ry Keppinger, Ed Warrenburg, Bruce Nichols, Don Baldwin and Gary Patterson. Warrenburg and Patterson are lefties. As is com mon with most youngsters, their problem is control. Genna will hold daily drills at Baker the rest of the week. He must cut his squad down to 16 by June 30. Other opening district 2A gam es Sunday find Stayton at Mill City and Oregon City at Wood-burn. tmi,i..mKitJmTi I '' ' ' " I A Rollin' Along (Continued from preceding page) Crack of the week, as made in last Sunday's huge Shrine golf tourney: Woman, following husband around the course as he fired in the tourney, sighed, "I wish I'd never married a golfer" . . . Hubby, pawing around in the weeds trying to find his ball, looks up with a long face and retorts, "Honey, who said you ever married a golfer!" ... Kiner Hasn't Time to Top Ruth's Production Ralph Kiner, the Pittsburgh sock man who may soon be leaving the Pirate bailiwick via trade or sale, has averaged more homers per season than any ether man in Major League his tory. In eight campaigns, Kiner has wafted an average of bet ter than 37 over the outfield barriers. Compare that with Babe Ruth's average of slightly ever 32 in 23 seasons . . . The ques tion is whether Kiner could maintain that pace or even equal Roth's over the long haul . . . Kiner, just past his 300th wal lop, likely won't approach the Bambino's lifetime mark of bet ter than 700 circuit swats, for Ralph's now around 28 and has no more than mebbe seven or eight seasons remaining ... The bowling whizzes slated to show at Uni-Bowl next Monday night and they amount to just about the five top keglers in the land have been pulled out to this neck of the woods by one com pelling force. That's the Delake Coast Tourney, an affair that in the space of a few years has grown into one of THE events on the bowling map . . . It's on the amazing tide this idea ef so rick and popular a tourney being born la a small hamlet like Delake. The an swer, of course, Is 100 per cent cooperation from aU concerned over in the little Coast community. The donors. te the added, prize list in such a meet know that in contributing they're at the same time giving a shot in the arm te their own businesses. Any way, you look at it. the case of Delake is unique. Certainly the smallest town in the U.S. to hold a tourney of such propor tions . . . BevensUl Be 'Yardstick lor Series Hurlers The end of the baseball road for BiU Bevens but Bill has a consolation. His name will live amid the swirling turn-ever of the baseball ranks. In countless World Series deep into the fu ture, they'll be airing Bill's name, telling hew close the big guy got to getting that no-hitter back in 1947. Bevens will be the yard stick for great series pitching performances; hell conUnue te be the yardstick until somebody comes along and actually does fashion a no-hitter la the Fall Classic . . . Great crowds bunched around downtown TV sets to see the coronation ceremonies; and a few hours later almost as many were johnny-on-the-spot to see a couple of guys from Hell's Kitchen bash their way through a half hour of fisticuffs. So royalty would seem to have competition in the "oomph" department ... There were the nsual denials, etc., when the first story came out that Rogers Hornsby's scalp was la the process of be ing lifted as skipper of the St Louis Brownies. Similar denials new that Hornsby is on the pan at Cincinnati. So might as - well figure the Rajah IS on the way out as Redleg chieftain ... The tragedy with Hornsby, an all-time great and a perfectionist in his own right, is that he expects his players to emulate him. And that's pretty tough to do . . . 1 IERW nwms WHO N&ED CHECK BRADLEY'S BEM1Y HARVEST FniAIICE PLAII 110 INTEREST CHARGED Gel Your Hew Bike How! O Raleigh O Schwin O Cohuabia Each Guaranteed am lonq as You OwzvIt 237 N. High St. 1 j! 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