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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1954)
FoIIovj This Cliarilto Journey is Sbiri . See Hotv"Sltei ' . L " : ' . ' - I - : ' ' ' ' - ' - -.'!.. ,' Oi'ml67 " I j ' . v -.-.- f , " I - r 1 1 I - , Ontario 49 GrMhi4l .P5 I i CUhkinls 57 . ! j , i t. 'Clibkinii6j .. ! ! 1 I . i jtaosmH 64 . L j T lRoomel6! Milwuklo 52 ; . Hirshfii!l Ontario 55 J ',! 4 - - - i ; j Roosevelt 60 ' j Sala47 t j J CUhkanltW MinhfIeM50 Wm57 j :Gresham 5f I - u, t ! H"" I Marshfield 63 5i : Hl,uki 44 ' 1 J J. 1 HanhUM MiwiuttS3 j ' . j MilWki.72 i J f MHwauki. j CHAMPIONSHIP Mth Placet flump'ship consolation' Tb Daf's 57 backt I CUhMi7" Minhnld bacm i , ;; u. ce ,' I Wniitt Eu8eM Madrid n.- .j , (Runner up) . I I MsdrM 54 I L . J ' ' Benson 51 - f I J DaHas 59 Tht Dalits 54 . Binj0B 52 . g .Jj . , : I : 1 Benson 46 , Madras 50 I Dallas 66 i D 37 1 j, j ... 1 It - . nenson n . i W""1 j ! Eugene 44 Cenralls3S -V Conallls 44 i I ' I 1 Conallls 46 i leaverfon 39 Astoria 45 Eogent 70 ! ; Eugene 50 s - i i I BaavtrtoB 47 lea'rt'B42 tun4y ( 1 ' i ; ; M : ' N . 'NaturaF Set at Armory (5fk plKe) Correlation Beats Arcaro Horse.., Shoemaker Mount Wins $146,250 Florida Derby MIAMI, Fla. CP) The California combination of Correlation and jockey Willie Shoemaker won the $146,250 Florida Derby before a record crowd of 31.764 at Gulf -stream Park Saturday. , ! Correlation, carrying 119 pounds, Reddish, Burr Nab Harrison Race Laurels SUN VALLEY, Idaho 0B - Jack Reddish, Sun Valley ski instructor, and Jannette Burr, Seattle, flashed downhill events in the 14th Harri man Cup races. "Despite a fall at the starting gate, Reddish made the 1.7 mile course with a 2,800-foot drop in 2:46.4, almost two seconds ahead of Jack Nagel, Skykomish, Wash., whose time was 2:48.2. It was a repeat performance for the Salt Lake City ski ace, who won the combined title in 1948. He becomes a top contender for an other win, with the slalom to be run on Ruud Mountain Sunday. Five hundred persons lined Ex hibition Run, critical section of the men's course, expecting a rash of spills. However, the race was slowed by an eight-inch snowfall, and there were no serious falls. Nancy Banks, Everett, Wash., one of the women favorites, broke an ankle at the top gate on Olym pic Run. Miss Burr arrived here Fricfay from Europe, where she had been competing with the American FIS team, to post her second Harri--man downhill win. Hei time was 2:22.6. She captured the eventin 1948. ' ' i Sally Niedlinger, Los Angeles, finished second in 2:27.8; Mrs. Hhona Gillis, mother of two, from Boise, third in 2:30.8. and Mrs. Dorothy L. Modenese, Seattle, fourth with 2:39. ran the mile and a furlong in 1:531-5 over a heavy track and whipped Woodvale : Farm's Goya mo, 2-1 favorite ridden by Eddie Arcaro, by a length in a driving finish. ! i Cain Hoy Stable's j Big Crest; with Henry Moreno up, was third and Joe W. Brown's Gigantic fin ished fourth in -the (field of 17 speedy 3-year-olds. I j Correlation paid $17.20, $6.60 and $3.30 while Goyamo returned $4.20 and $3.80. Big Crest paid $6.50 to show. ; i The big crowd poured $312,135 through the betting machines on the derby, largest single handle of any race, in Gulf stream Park's his tory. -v ! t Correlation, owned by Robert S. Lytle of Los Angeles, was the first horse shipped from California to compete in a Florida! stakes race. Sain's Salary Hits $30,000 ST. PETERSBURG Fla. 0B Johnny Sain signed his New York Yankee baseball contract Saturday and took his first workout after ending his brief retirement. The veteran righthanded pitcher said he had persuaded a lifelong friend to take over, his newly ac quired automobile agency at Wal nut Ridge, Ark., and: declared his main interest until October was to help the Yankees win their sixth straight pennant and World Series. Sain reportedly gotUn $8,000 in crease to boost his salary to $30,- 000. ' ; t Quits t " V 1 rf : "sTV - " , ,s V"''" y : L 3 1 TAMPA, Fla. Cfi The Chicago White Sox, uncorking an eight-hit attack led by Minnie Minoso s no. 1, homer and limiting Philadelphia to three hits, blanked the Phillies 5-0 Saturday. Busy Pierce, the Sox ace lefty. madei his season debut and yielded i I il. r: t it. :M Only lune jiii in ine iusi. miix ui- rtingsl Rookie lefthander Tom Flan- igan followed- and gave up five hits in four innings. Pierce struck out i of the 10 batters to face him. t - ...1, ; y BRADENTON. Fla. on - Veter an Andy Pafko singled with the bases loaded and two out in the ninth finning Saturday to give the Bobo Not Scared By Cuban's Talk CHICAGO W Middleweight champion Bobo Olson apparently is going to do all his fighting with welterweight king Kid Gavilan when they climb into the ring here April 2. The laconic Olsoa Satuday scarce ly lifted a scarred eyebrow at Gav ilan's claim Thursday he would knock him out and then take on heavyweight champion Rocky Mar ciano. " Braves Advance Sales Booming MILWAUKEE m - Ticket di rector Bill Eberiy of the Milwau kee Braves proudly reported Sat urday that advance ticket sales have passed the million mark and are still "moving afong." j Advance sales now stand at 1,040,000. m 7"---. I Recent mail ordej-s alsohaye come from points : as distant as Portland, Ore., Eberiy said. Braves' fans set a National L League attendance record of 1,- 826,397 last year in tne team s ini tial season at Milwaukee. CELTICS WIS i I BOSTON UB The Boston Cel tics edged the New! York Nicker bockers 79-78 Saturday, to elimi nate the New Yorkers from the Eastern Division playoffs of the National Basketball Assn. ; j Fish Conditions Vary in State NORTHWEST Steelhead fish ing has been fair on the Sandy the last few days. Most fish have been taken from Revenue bridge to the mouth of the river. Eggs and lures seem' to be about equal in effec tiveness. For the most part, the fish taken here have been , bright or only slightly colored. A couple of spring chinook were reported taken at the mouth of the Sandy at Sun Dial beach last week end. Water conditions here are low and clear. SOUTHWEST Perch angling Is good at TenmOe lakes. Some catches of striped bass were re ported from the' Coos Bay area. Spiny-ray fishing is starting in the coastal lakes. No chmooks have been caught in the Rogue river. river area, catfish angling has been slow. AH other seasons are closed ia this area. j CENTRAL Sturgeon fishing fon the Columbia river has been slow. Few steelhead are beng taken; ia Hood river, most are fairly dark. Fishing at Celilo is stow, and fish ing on the lower Deschutes is poor. NORTHEAST Steelhead catches have been poor on both the main John Day river and the north fork as the water has i been muddy. Lower Grande Ronde river has been poor. Some ; steelhead are being taken ton the tipper river on bait The water is rising and is clear. Fishing on the Idanha river has been poor. The river is low and clear. Angling success on MILT BAUM !: Silverton Mentor to Leave : Baum Resigns As Silverton Hoop Mentor SILVERTON -i (Special) Milton Baum, for the past five years head basketball and base ball coach at Silverton High School, has resigned to accept the pnncipalship of the high school at Elkton, in Douglas County. The resignation be comes effective at the end of the current school; year! Baum, who also served as an assistant in football, came to Silverton 'after graduating from Willamette University In 1949. In addition to his coaching, Baum has been vice-president of the school and formerly was city recreational director here. Baum and his wife will move to Elkton in July. Students .Tourney Enthusiasm Keeps Gendarmes Busy EUGENE (A With enthusi asms whetted by the state basket ball tournament, visiting high school students have run afoul of the law here. ; Police said Saturday that 17 had been arrested on liquor law and other violations. Seven boys and girls from Monmouth, Dallas and Independence were picked up on minor violations Thursday nighL They were turned over to faculty members of their schools. A Red mond youth was 1 jailed for two days for being drunk in an auto mobile. Fines of 125 eacn were levied against three students from Eugene, Beaverton and Corvaliis high schools. The others were picked up earlier In the week. Wbmen Stage Piitt' Meet Salem Golf Club women opened their fspring activity Wednesday with a nine-hole tourney decided On total putts. In the Class A di vision Mrs. Ed Roth and Mrs. Marcus Seale tied for first with 12 putts and in Class B honors went to Mrs. Eugene Kokko, also with 12 green shots. Mri. La Verne Nicholls won in Class D with 14 putts and winner n Class D was Mrs. Joan Phillips with 18 putts. Braves a 3-2 decision over the Cincinnati Redlegs. Pafko' drove in all three runs lor .Milwaukee SARASOTA, Fla. W) Mickey Owens' line single down the left field line in the, ninth inning drove home the only 'run as the Boston Red Sox chalked up a 1-0 victory over the Detroit Tigers before 3,166 fans Saturday. Statesman, Salem, Ore. Sua, March 21, IS 54 Sec 1) 11 .sid little feck lef ends Against Soniez Tuesday TogaohLine man who doubles as a . Tacama city councilman, will face one of the sternest tests' of his, career Tuesday night at the Armory' as he defends his world light heavy weight belt against the youth and all-around ability? of. the senaa- Frank Stdjack, the crafty maW tional Pepper ' Gomez, of Pasa dena, CaliL The scrap, heading a string of highly ; -promising matches, is a "natural anyway you look at it Stojack has been a terror in mat circles for a number of years, his pet weapons in knocking over the opposition being his airplane spin, pant swing and damaging drop- kicks. To counteract those weap ons, Gomez hopes to swing the tide with his youth and tremen dous natural ability, stemming from his days as an all-around athlete at Los Angeles City Col- ege." ' ; ' - - Gomez's agility decided last Tuesday's triple team mix as he came up with a backflip off the ropes one of the smoothest me neuvers seen at the Armory in a long time. ; Stipulations of the match are that Gomez must make 190 pounds the : afternoon of the match, that being the official Na- i tional Wrestling Alliance limit The weighing-in will take pjace in i Portland. Kurt von Poppenheim, the proud Russian, will tangle 'with George Dusette of Montreal in Tuesday night's semi-windup and there is a grudge angle here. The two were on opposite sides in the last card's triple tag team mix, so it 11 be a continuance of where they left off. John Henmng, the 205-pounder rom Florida, asked Promoter Elton Owen for stiffer opposition. He gets it Tuesday night when he takes on Luther Lindsey in a 20-minute special event. Lindsey will be favored over th ex-navy frogman, but Henmng has the equipment for a possible upset Don Kindred, the ruffian from New York, battles Tommy Mar- tindale of Milwaukee in the 8:30 curtain-raiser.! Kindred will be out to end it quick, since he is considerably i ruffled over being dropped to preliminary booking. Owen announces ?there will be no increase in prices for the card. Reservations can be made at Barb's sporting goods store. Bolt, Maer Retain Slender Tourney Lead MIAMI BEACH, Fla. tffl Tonvi my Bolt and Dick Mayer' clung to their one stroke lead in the $15,- 000 International Four-Ball golf tournament Saturday, fighting off a spirited bid -Jor first place by two young Califormans, Bud Hoi- scher and Bob Rosburg. Holscher, the 23-year-old Santa Monica sharpshooter, and his San Francisco partner, Rosburg. snatched the lead temporarily on Saturday's front line as Bolt, the stormy Texan, and Mayer, the St. Petersburg. Fla.,-star,. skidded to sixth place. But Mayer - splashed the hottest golfing streak of the tournament on the homestretch and lifted him and his partner back up to the top of the standings. Mayer and Bolt managed only a. single birdie between them as they took 35 strokes on the first nine, but Mayer's brilliance on the tough back nine gave them a 6-under-par 30 fora 54-hole best to go, they were 23 strokes under par for the Normandy Shores course. Five teams were jammed up in a third-place tie at 195 and three more were deadlocked at 196. Ten teams were four strokes or less behind the leaders and any of thes : s noiti dlk- anebo couceta these combinations could take charge in Sunday's last round MIAMI un Carl Furillo, the defending National League batting champion, cracked a homer and three doubles for a perfect day as the Dodgers scored their 11th straight exhibition victory by de feating the New York Yankees 8-5 before 6,730 fans Saturday. It was the seventh straight loss for the world champions. ST. PETERSBURG. Fla. (41 -Stu Miller, striving for the No. 4 spot on the St Louis Cardinals pitching staff, pitched four score less Innings Saturday as the Red birds defeated the Washington Sen ators, 5-3 FT. PIERCE, Fla. UP) Two three run innings gave the Pitts burgh Pirates an 8 2 win over the Philadelphia Athletics Saturday, It was the Bucs' eighth victory in 10 Grapefruit League starts. Writer Finds Jehosie Minus Any Nicknames YUMA. Ariz, tffl Hugh Trader, Baltimore baseball writer talking to Jehosie Heard, a Negro rookie pitcher for the Baltimore Orioles from Memphis, asked the hurler if he had a nickname. "What do the other players cal you? Trader inquired. Heard thought the question over carefully and finally supplied the answer. "Some times they calls me Jeho sie and sometimes they calls me Heard." That ended the interview. . - 1 1 VJL -S? i - . - '': II ' I f -' : V lr Tide Table n Tides for Taft. Oregon, March, 1954 (compiled by th U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey, Portland, Ore.) HIGH WATERS LOW WATERS Max. 21 21 23 24 25 2S 27 21 Time 1:07 isa, 1:31 V-m. 1:33 a.m. 2:32 pjn. 2:01 ajn. 3:18 p.m. 1:31 a.m. 4:10 pjn. 3:08 a.m. 8:13 pjn. 3:54 a.m. S:30 pjn. 4:53 a.m. 7:43 pjn. 8:03 ajn. 8:3T p.m. Ht. 6.3 53 3 5.0X 6.3 x .4.7 ti 4.4 6.1 42 6.0 4.1 8.9 4.3 38 46 Time 7:43 ajn. 7:31 pjn. 820 ajn. 7:58 pjn. 8:59 ajn. V 8:2S pjn. 8:43 ajn. 8:59 pjn. 10:34 ajn. 9:42 pjn. 11:35 ajn.x 10:41 pjn. 12:41 pjn. 12.-04 a.nu 1:45 pjn. Ht. 0.6 1.9 0.3 2.3 0.5 2.6 0.6 2.9 0.6 31 0.7 3.3 0.6 3.4 0.5 FRANK STOJACK Tough Test Faced Lockman Gets Death Threat LAS VEGAS. Nev. UP) - Whitey Lockman, first baseman for the New York Giants, played nine in nings in a spring training game with the Cleveland Indians here Friday although a man had warned police he would kill Lockman at the ball park. Det Robert Dula told newsmen that an unidentified telephone call er declared "Whitey will be shot today at the ball game." The man gave no reason, Dula said. Plain clothesmen were manted at various points at Cashman field. . A special detail also was assigned in the dugout and to accomoany Lockman from the field to the lock et rooms and then to his hotel and the airport - The ball player told newsmen he could "not think of anyone who would want to take his life. SEMI-FINALS REACHED ! PINEHURST, N. C. W Nation si champion Mary Lena Faulk, of Thomasville, Ga., and Barbara Ro mack, .of Sacramento, Clif, won their matches Saturday to join medalist Joyce Ziske of Waterford, Wis., and Dorothy Kirby, of Atlan ta, in the semi-finals of the North and South Women's Amateur golf tournament PIERSALL SIDELINED SARASOTA, Fla. UH A pulled endoh in his left wrist sidelined Red Sox centerfielder" Jimmy Pier- sail Saturday for a penod of two weeks. MESA, Ariz. Ufi A double' by Chris Kits os sparked a three run ninth - inning rally that pushed the Chicago Cubs to a 7 - i victory over the Baltimore Orioles Saturday. It was the Cubs' second straight win over Baltimore after a six-game losing streak in the exhibition season. Few people are fishing for catfish. ; Pine creek has been fair. Wallowa The streams are muddy and the river is clearing and steelhead are weather is cold. In the Umpqual being taken on bait , : t'a rd y ork . . .da ngercus work . . HERE'S THE SHOE' tf, i " FOR YOU! S?U. y 9 I 4 . -NHMiava a Robinson" Wins Suit for 25,000 NEW YORK UB A Supreme Court jury in a verdict on record Friday awarded $25,000 damages to former welterweight champion Sugar Ray Robinson in a libel ac tion against the publishers of the "Amsterdam News." 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