I. llf -.:..' 3, Vgr jjllj Still slining, Vern Stephens of the Boston Sox I VI vui hears Umpire John Stevens cry "Yer out" as Jerry Coleman, New York second sacker, fires to first in a vain attempt to complete a double play in second inning of a crucial American league game at Yankee stadium in New York. The action was the result of Bobby Doerr's grounder to Yankee shortstop Phil Rizzuto. Bosox won, 7-1. (Acme Telephoto) Porky Wins Idaho Open; Yost Rates 2nd Amateur Boise, Sept. 12 UP) Ed (Por ky) Oliver of Seattle smacked a bole In one on the fifth hole yes terday, and went on to win the Idaho open golf tournament with an 11-under par 205. The Seattle professional, who topped 120 amateurs and money players in the 54-hole medal play, was four strokes ahead of the leading amateur, Bob Duden, of Portland, Ore., who carded a 209. Oliver's score for the final 36 holes was 137. He toured the Plantation course in a four un der par 68 the day before. The former Ryder cup team member hot his hole-in-one on the sec ond 18 for the day. The runner-up professional was Marvin (Bud) Ward of Great Falls, Mont., with a 212. He shot a final round of 74-68. Stan Leonard of Vancouver, B. C, was third with a 213. Fol lowing at 21S were: Ron Honsberger, Hood River, Ore.; Benny Colk, Vancouver, Wash., and Roy Owan, Butte, Mont., both Bill Welch of Lew iston and Emory Zimmerman of Portland carded 216s, Portland's John Langford had 217 and Woody Lamb of Bend, Ore., shot a 218. Dick Yost of Portland to taled a 212, which gave him the number two spot among amateurs. Other low scorers in that division were Glenn Sheriff, Seattle, 217; Otto Hof meister, Lewiston, 218; John Ekstrom, Eugene, Ore., 219; Walter McElroy, Vancouver, B.C., 221 and Dale Cherry of Baker, Ore., 222. The title earned $600 for Oli ver, $400 for Ward and $310 for Leonard. The amateurs shared merchandise prizes. Morgenthau Improves New York, Sept. 12 (U.B. Henry Morgenthau, Jr., former secretary of the treasury, was reported improving and in good condition today at New York hospital where he is ill with pneumonia. Youth and Speed Keynote Huskies' 1949 Grid Team By HARRY CARLSON (United Prut Sporu Wrlttr) Seattle, Wash., U. C o a e h Howie Odell probably will field the youngest team in the Pa cific Coast Conference this fall but he Is quite certain that is will give a good account of itself. The Huskies, winners of only two games last year when Odell was hospitalized for most of the season, have shown a lot of co ordination in spring and early fall practice and they should do well. If the team breaks even this fall, Odell will be satisfied. He's sure these boys will be winners when they get to be juniors. Right now at least four sophomores will make the starting lineup. Quarterback Don Heinrich; Fullback Hugh McElhenny and Guard Char lie Gasson, all up from the 1948 Frosh team, have been consistently lined up with the first team in drills, Fritz Ap king, a six-foot, five-Inch sophomore end, has alternated with Chuch Olson at left end. Another sophomore, Loran Perry of Great Falls, Mont., has a 50-50 chance of nailing down one of the tackle positions; and Sophomore Darold Talley will see a lot of action at end. That makes a flock of inexpe rience for a club that plays one of the nation's toughest sched ules. The Huskies start in with University of Utah, Rocky Mountain King-pin; then play Minnesota and Notre Dame be fore embarking on a seven-game PCC schedule. Teaming with the young sters in the backfield will be Roland Kirkby and Jack Seth, a pair of junior halfbacks. That backfield probably will rate with any on the West Coast. The line, however, isn't any thing to rave about. Along with the boys coming up from the Frosh, Odell has 16 lettermen on the club, including backs. Among the better athletes available for forward wall duty are George Bayer, a three-year veteran tackle; Joe Cloldt, vet eran end; Bill Burnett at left guard, and Mike Michael, a cen ter. The chances are that the Huskies will field an excep tionally fast club, with proba bly the trickiest offensive ever put on display by a Washing ton football team. It may not win too consistently this year, but with a year's experience, it should be a tough cookie in 1950. The Husky schedule: Sept. 17 Utah at Seattle. Sept. 24 Minnesota at Min neapolis. Oct. 1 Notre Dame at Seat tie. Oct. 8 Oregon State at Seattle. Oct. 15 Stanford at Seattle. Oct. 22 California at Berke ley. Oct. 29 Southern Califor- Capltal Journal, Salem, Oregon, Monday, Sept. 12, 1949 9 nia at Seattle. Nov. 5 Oregon at Portland. Nov. 12 UCLA at Los An geles. Nov. 19 Washington Stata at Seattle. Ferrier Nabs KC Open Over Bumpy Fairways Kansas City, Sept. 12 W) Jim Ferrier is champion of the reviv ed Kansas City open golf tour nament mainly because he was the best man in the rough and on the bumpy fairways. The heavyweight San Fran cisco golfer won $1,000 first prize yesterday in completing the 72 holes on the hilly Swope park public course with 277 strokes, 11 under par. Dick Metz of Arkansas City, Kas., needing three strokes to catch Ferrier at the start Wed nesday, managed a 71 for a 281 total. He earned $700. National Open Champion Cary Middlecoff, who said he was quitting the tournament after carding a 76 Monday and then changed his mind, also shot a 71. It gave the Memphis dentist a 285 total. British PGA to Battle on Ban of Locke by Americans By OSCAR FRALET (Unltd Preaj Sporu Writer) New York, 0J.R) British Open Champion Bobby Locke dis closed today that the British P.G.A. had slated discussions with United States P.G.A. offi cials now enroute to England for the Ryder Cup matches con cerning his disbarment from American tournaments, Locke, facing two operations on his return to South Africa next week, was barred by the P.G.A. after winning the Brit ish Open and then failing to re turn in time for the Inverness four-ball in which he was sched uled to compete. Locke refused any other com ment as he arrived in New York to attend to his Dunlop Sport ing goods connections, other than to say: "I was named captain of the British P.G.A. after win ning the British Open. As a member of the British P.G.A., the matter now Is in the hands of Commander R. C. T. Coe, its secretary, and he will conduct discussions with the U.S. P.G.A." That statement.however, por tended trouble for the U.S. Ry der Cup team when it lands in England for the international matches Sept. 16-17. Ed Dudley, power behind the throne of the current inadequate U.S. P.G.A. setup, went along with the American team as an honorary captain. And it is certain that he and Coe will go to the mat for a real show down. For Locke, who flies back to South Africa next Thurs day and there will undergo an appendectomy and an opera tion for removal of a cyst from his right eye, received a raw deal here. Particularly if the only reason for bounc ing him was his failure to "keep commitments." There isn't a pro golfer in the P.G.A. who hasn't, at one time another, failed to keep a tournament date. The instances are too numerous to mention. Locke notified the P.G.A. in the United States as soon as pos sible after winning the British Open that he would not appear at Inverness. The fact was made that sporting goods business con nections in England made it im possible for him to leave. And there is no doubt that the sporting goods manufac turers run the top American pro golfers with iron-clad contracts telling them where to go and how to get there. It is a very important part of making a liv ing on the fairways and greens. Locke doesn t mention this, probably because he is afraid to give the impression that he is crawling to the P.G.A. in the United States or that he is a fel low who fancies himself," as the British say. He Is keeping a tightly but toned lip and waiting for the British P.G.A. to carry the ball. It will, too. Meanwhile, there Is no dodg ing the real reasons why Locke was barred. He simply had his hand too deep in the prize pocket. The accurate Afrikaneer came over here in 1947 to win the Carolina Open, Houston Open, Philadelphia Inquirer, Goodall Round Robin, Canadian Open, Tam O'Shanter and the Colum bus, O., Open. He won $26,000. In 1948 he copped the Caro lina Open, the Chicago Vic tory Open and the Phoenix Open, being high up enough to bank $20,000. This year he took top honors at Virginia Beaoh and in the Goodall was barred from the P.G.A. because he "was no longer a visitor" and then took the British Open "for the greatest win of my life." Palmistry Readings tell Will and your Dast. oresent future. Will advise on love. marriage and business. Answers all questions. Are you worried? Why be In doubt? Special Readings. Open v a.m. p" to 10 p.m. Moved from 466 Ferry to 173 S. Commercial m trap -I He tied for third place with Dave Douglas of Newark, Del, Each won $550, Bo Wininger, Oklahoma A. and M. star from Guthrie, Okla., topped the amateurs with a 288, even par for 72 holes. He shot a 73 yesterday. Ted Neist of Walla Walla wasn., urea a zib-75 ZBl. giv ing him a $160 share in a tie for 11th place with two other pros and two amateurs. Salem Doctor Crash Lands Gresham, Sept. 12 W Dr. Merle E. Brown, Salem, crash- landed a two-place private air plane here late Saturday. He and a passenger, Adrian Brown, es caped injury. WRESTLING Tuesday Night 8:30 EIGHT MAN Elimination Tournament SALEM ARMORY PHENOPLAST The NEW WONDER FINISH Make your Table tops or Concrete Floors PERMANENTLY BEAUTIFUL Stainproof, Scratchproof, Cigarette-burn Proof Pumalire Block & Supply West Salem Ph. 25643 'Vince's Electric" Vacuum Cleaner. SALES SERVICE REPAIRS RENTALS On All Types Household or Commercial Also Waxers ALL WORK FULLY GUARANTEED Free Pick-up and Delivery PHONE 3-9239 GreatChristopher For over Four Decadea Americas' Finest Hard and Soft Corn or Cl lout Remedy. It Remove where others Peel. Instant Relief. Does not Evaporate, 60c and 35c Adv. D.Al.hM DRUG CO. 333 State St., Salem Wgar beyond cowpdceJ CQNGOLWtt I4C.D lAVrfff Ren's a floor covering that can taVe plenty of traffic without showing the strain! For Gold Seal Congoleum fives you a wear-layer of teat-tough ened paint and baked enamel equal in thickness to 8 coats of the best floor paint applied by hand. Look for the Gold Seal that meam more stamina, more sparkle, more style per dollar than any other popular-priced floor covering can give you. Stop in at your dealer's todayl See the itunning new Con irleum pattern!, both in rugs and by the yard . . . all with the famous OoldSealmnney-backguarafliec. 1949, Contoium-haua Inc, Ktvnr, N. V. 11 mil Toil ay's buy in Hondcd Whiskey! Pebbleford Pebble WORD I $rms3MT - f WNtKB Kentucky Straight Itourhon Whiskey Bottled in Bond 100 proof WUB KM uOf rTw. ebblefo'rd DISTILLERY K55 pint rj enjoyed In tin American home UXl'LIUMW I in iiirn m CM Dryclean Fall ond Winter apparel now. Meticulous at tention to details. Surpris ingly low prices for qualify service I Electric Cleaners 565 Highland Ph. 3-4821 If you're moving . Want To Know A Secret? You can save up to Half on your moving bill if you Rent a Truck m Rental Service Car Truck by The riour-Day-Week-Month Special Refrigeration Trucks Padding at No Extra Cost Gas Cr Oil Furnished SMILING JACK'S SUPER SERVICE Center and Church Stl. Phon. J-9600 A lodazs oaa merican Frontier is right on iour own Main Street ! YES, for every man and woman there are still opportunities freely open for the taking! To know that thiss Is so, look about you . . . At the young shipping clerk who took two years of night school in mechanics, and now is a tune up specialist down at the garage . . . At the drug clerk who turned the Idea of home permanents into a nation-wide Industry . . . At the woman whose health-building recipe for bread put her into a successful business and made jobs for many of her neighbors . . . At the fellow down at the mill who took the trouble to learn more than his job required, and last week was made a foreman! These folks and many millions more whatever their politics and backgrounds simply don't believe American frontiers are closed. They've found their opportunities right on Main Street! And they don't believe the "do-it-yourself" spirit is out of date. Not now ... or ever! Not if we recognize one plain fact: America is what it is because it sees more in the "do-it-yourself" spirit than in a spoon-fed security! In other countries people are coming to wait for things to be done for them. But in America we HAVE much more because we DO much more for ourselves! In no other place is there so much that is worth working for. . . Seeing the evidence of this all around us, we keep on developing new skills, new occupations, new ideas. We make new inventions, develop 'Thera ar plenty of chances to ho your own row . . . now mora thitn aver before," says Donald M. Clark, 25, owner of an aerial crop-spraying buflinma in Delaware. "That's the Kreat thing about this country you can make your own opportunities, and make 'm pay offl" new materials, organize new services. This means that our opportunities are constantly expanding! These are today' "frontiers." They art open to all of us. But for some there is need to re-affirm that the ceiling in America is still unlimited . . . to prove it by the stories of those who have the stuff to grasp their chances. Hence this new series of advertisements... For life insurance itself is a natural expression of the do-it-yourself spirit. It is itself an aggres sively competitive Main Street institution. Life insurance has grown big because the need is big, because 73 million American policyholders depend on it. Some 584 life insurance com panies actively compete to meet this need. Each year mor Americans of their own choice turn to life insurance for the security that helps free our minds from worry . . . that releases us to make the most of our opportunities. In this, the country's more than 150,000 life insurance agents themselves contribute significant service. It is their specialized knowledge which helps make life insurance do the most for the individual. Yes, the growth of life insurance Is in itself outstanding evidence of the continued vigor of the do-it-yourself spirit that still if America. People believe in life insurance, because they've seen it help so many people, so many ways! INSTITUTE OF LIFE INSURANCE etntral aourt of intormntion about the bulnr 60 East 42nd Street, New York 17, N. Y. "Anyone today has a bet tor ehanoa to gt ahead than his father did," says Glenn J. flraber, Hartville, Ohio, farmer. "Look at the new things to b learned and put to work on the farm and in industry! No reaaoa why a nu oan't still go far on his own steam hate In America,!" IHI STItAIOHT WHIIKIY DIITILUNO CO. Of AMIIICA, INC., N. Y. C I 1