Uvnnmite Nt fr notmnr
I is Bill Goodloe,
Jr., of Valdosta, Ga., nick
named "Dynamite." He's dy
namits as a personality and as
a golfer, one of the hot con
tenders in the national ama
teur championship tournament
to be held at Minneapolis, He
is easy to spot while practic
ing. He had decked his five-foot-five,
245-pound frame in
plaid sox with matching cap,
bright blue shorts and yellow
T-shirt.
National Amateur
Tourney Starts
On Windy Links
Minneapolis, Aug. 21 () The
1950 'national amateur golf
champion will have to have
more luck than good shots to
win, says Frank Stranahan, who
should know.
The No. 1 Simon pure tourna
ment of the nation began today
with the first section of 210 play
ers teeing off over the wind
swept Minneapolis Golf club
course on the first round.
They started just after break
of dawn in man-to-man combat
and will continue at .six-minute
intervals until dusk, r The set-up
for tomorrow is 64 second-round
matches, with double rounds dai
ly on tap Wednesday and ThurS'
day. After that come 36-hole
emi-final and final duels Friday
and Saturday.
No one in the field has a more
burning desire to win than
Stranahan, the millionaire's son
from Toledo. He met Arnold Pal
mer of LaTrobe, Pa., today a
former Wake Forest player
whom he trounced 12 and 11' in
the 1949 north-south amateur.
NORTH MARION GRIDDERS
START WORK THURSDAY
Woqdburn Football practice
at the : North Marion high
chool will open Thursday, Au
gust 24, starting at 7 p. m. Coach
Hal Elmers will.be on hand to
Issue uniforms at that time.
Practice will be held each eve
ning thereafter.
Southpaw Castoffs Return
To Bedevil Tigers,
By JOE REICHLER
(Associated Press sports Wrlterl
A trio of scorned southpaws
were dancing on air today to
the music made by the moans
and. groans of the Detroit Ti
gers and Cleveland Indians.
Fresh from upset victories
over the pennant contenders, the
trio Pitchers Stubby Overmire,
Bill Wright and Billy Pierce
proved once again how embar
rassing It can be to underesti
mate e castoff.
Overmire, cast adrift by De
troit last winter, gained sweet
revenge upon his former em
ployers yesterday when he hung
8-2 defeat on the league lead
ers to give the St. Louis Browns
an even break in their double
header. The Tigers had come
from behind to win the opener,
8.4.
Wight and Pierce, traded off
by the New York Yankees and
Tigers, respectively, turned In
parkling performances in
pitching the Chicago White Sox
to a 2-1 and 6-5 triumphs over
the Indians.
Taking advantage of the Ti
ger and Indian lapses, the
Yankees won two games faom
the hapless , Philadelphia Ath
letics, 6-4 and 5-2, to climb
Into second place past the In
dians. The Bronx Bombers,
who open a long home stay
Tuesday with an important
three-game series against the
Tigers, thus chewed a full
' game off the Tigers' lead and
moved another game in front
of the Tribe. The Tigers' mar
gin over the Yanks is three
games.
Boston's idle Red Sox remain
Tigers
Caps to Invade Waters Lot
For New Series on Tuesday
9
Tacoma, Wash., Aug, XI Ta-
coma and Salem wound up their
competition against each other
for the season with a twin bill
Sunday night and the' Tigers
took both of them 7-5 and 1-0
to make it six out of eight
over the Senator! during the
last six days of play.
In both Instances last night
the visiting Solons outhit Jim
Brillheart's club, but base blows
when they were needed were
few and far between.
Outhit, 15 to 9, In the first,
full length contest, it was Dick
Greco's home run In the
eighth that gave Tacoma the
win in a see-saw scrap. . Gene
Valentine went the route for
Salem and could easily have
won if his mates had been able
to drive home Just a small por
tion of the 11 men they left
stranded.
The Senators forced Gil Loust
to take an early shower and had
little difficulty with Hunk An
derson but the blows didn't come
at the right time.
The nightcap was a sharp
hurling duel between Bill Os
born of Salem and Tom Kipp
of the Tigers. Osborn gave up
but three blows as against five
for Kipp. Early in the contest,
after Tacoma had pushed over
its one run, the Senators muffed
an opportunity when, with Bob
Cherry on third and Mel Was
ley on second, First Baseman
Wimpy Quinn took Milt Mar
tin's grounder near first, hesi
tated a moment, and then fired
to Jose Bache at second. Was-
ley was caught off that bag and
was run down by Bache who
then rilled a throw to Bill
Sheets at the plate where
Cherry was caught sliding in.
In the ninth the. Senators
again placed men on second
and third with one out. But
once more fortune favored the
Tiges as Ray McNulty, pinch
hitting , for Osborn, took a
third called strike while Gav
iglio lofted one to Israel in
center for the final out.
Tacoma took Saturday night's
single engagement, 8 to 3, an
error by Second Baseman Bache
giving the Senators their three
tallies in the ninth.
Rock Wools List
15 for Trip to
State Tourney
Campbell Rock Wool, Salem
Softball champions, will enter
the state tournament which
opens at Pendleton next Sunday
with a squad of 15 men.
The roster will include: Pitch
ers Keith Marshall, Jim Raw
lins, Bob Knight; catchers Pete
McCaffery, John Payne; Infield
ers Tony Prudente, Pete Hof-
fert, Bud Craig, Gordy McMor
ris, Warren Valdez; outfielders
Phil Salstrom, Johnny Hof
fert, Joe Phreet, Bob Karns. The
squad will be managed by Del
Snider.
9 Major Standings
(Br the Associated Press)
NATIONAL LlAOtm
W 1. Pet. W L Pet.
Phlidlphlft 69 4ft .05 New York IT it Alt
Brooklyn 60 47 .Bfll Chlckla 10 W .449
Boston AO ftO .545 Clnclnatl 4T 64 .425
at. Louis 61 51 .545 Plttabnh 41 II .153
Bcsnltl Bandar
at. Louis 3 Cincinnati 3
Chicago 4.6 Pittsburgh 1-3
Philadelphia at New York and Boston
at Brooklyn, postponed rain.
AHtEICAN LIAGL'K
w L Pet. W t Pet.
Detroit II .649 Weihlntn 55 1 .450
New York 71 44 .517 Ohlcato 4 71 .393
Cleveland 71 45 .607 St. Louis 39 73 .351
Boston 69 48 .590 FlUldlPM 40 77 jn
Keaalta Sanity
enjeato 29 ciereiana i-
Detroit 1-3 St. Louis 4-9
New York Philadelphia 4-1
Washington at Boston, oosttotned rein.
in fourth place, six game off
the pace. A washout of their
scheduled game with Washing
ton halted temporarily their
seven-game winning streak.
Rain also cut the National
league activity. With the tour
eastern teams yielding to weep
ing skies, the spotlight was
thrust on the St. Louis Cardinals.
The Redbirds rose to the oc
casion, coming from behind to
nip the Cincinnati Reds, 3-z,
Stan Muslal drove in all St
Louis' runs with three singles.
Howie Pollet gained the nod
over Cincinnati's Herman Weh-
meier The victory moved the
Cards into a third place tie with
Boston.
Paul Minner ana Frank
(Dutch) Hiller. another pair of
discards, pitched the Chicago
Cubs to a 4-2, 5-2 sweep of a
doubleheader from Pittsburgh.
Minner, the former Brooklyn
Dodger lefthander, allowed eight
Win Final Doubleheader
WIL Standings
(Br ttw Assoclsttd press)
W L
Tacoma 18 48
Yakima 78 50
Trl-City 69 57
Wenatchee 69 58
Victoria 58 71
Vancouver 53 71
Salem 52 75
Spokane 49 76
Pet.
.619
.609
.548
MS
.450
.427
.409
.392
Games Sunday
Tacoma 7-1, Salem o-o.
Yakima 10, Spokane 2.
Tri-Clty 27, Wenatchee 2.
Onlv names scheduled.
Games Saturday
Tacoma 8. Salem 3.
Yakima 12-8. Spokane 2-1.
Tri-City 2-6, Wenatchee. 1-5.
Victoria 6-4, Vancouver 1-3.
The Tigers maintained the
leadership of the circuit but the
Yakima Bears kept hot on their
trail by dropping Spokane in a
single encounter, 10 to 2.
The Vancouver Capilanos, who
move into Salem Tuesday night
for a series of four games, were
idle Sunday as were the Vic
toria Athletics. The Caps are
three and a half games ahead of
Salem. Tuesday night's opener
will be a doubleheader begin
ning at 7 o'clock.
Tri-City took over third place
in the league by blasting the
Wenatchee Chiefs 27 to 2. The
winner picked up 13 unearned
tallies and a pair of legitimate
ones in a wild third inning.
Official Box
(First Game)
Sftiem IS)
(7) Tftcomft
A H O A
A H O A
Drew.rf 6 4 a 0 Cantron,3
3 10 0
OaviB-10,2 4 l a a inraei.cf 4 a o o
Bpaeter.lf 6 3 3 0 Gilford ,1 -4 0 2 3
Cherry.cf 4 3 5 0 CJreco.rf 3 2 S 0
Wasley.s 5 2 13 Quinn lb 3 l s a
Martin.c 5 13 0 Snyder.lf 4 10 0
aolUtn,l 5 17 1 Plscher.c 3 0 7 1
Bcott.u 2 o 2 3 sauie. at 4 2 4 4
Valtine.P 4 10 1 Loulst, p 1 0 1 1
An a e ran, p u i a
Total IS IS 24 10
Total 31 9 03 13
Balem 100 021 001 3
Hits 320 122 22116
Tacoma 200 012 02x 7
Hits ' 300 022 02X 8
Winning Pitcher Anderaon.
IP AB H R ERSOBB
Valentine 8 31 9 9 7 1 3
Louat BY, 24 9 4 4 4 3
Anderaon 3 15 8 1 1 1 o
Errors, Scott, Fischer; HBP, Greco by
Valentine: WP, Loust) LOB, B-ll, T-5;
HR, Waaler, Cherry: 3BH, Wasley, 2BH,
Drew, Quinn, Cherry; RBI, Bpaeter, Git
ford, Snyder 3, Wesley 2, Israel, Gavlsllo,
Oreco, Bache, Cherry; 8H, Qavlgllo, Loust;
SB, Bpaeter, Fischer; DP, Bache -Quinn;
Wasley-GavIgllo-GoldJteln; Quinn-Blche-Flacher.
T 2;11. Urajw. Hanlch and
lacovcttl.
f Second Gam)
Salm (1) Tacoma
A H O A
Gavlglo.2 S
Drew.rf I
Cherry.cf 3
Waaler,! 2
Beard.e 3
Spaeter.lf 2
Scptt.u 2
oaldstln.l 3
Osborn, p 2
xMcNulty 1
3 Oantron.l 3
9 Israel.cf 3
0 Glfford.S 3
0 Oreco, rf 3
0 Qulnn.1 2
0 Snyder, If 1
2 Sheets.c 2
0 Bache.ss. 2
0 13
0 3 0
17 0
0 3 0
1 7 0
113
0 0 3
0 0
KIpp.p 1
0 0 0
Total
3 21 11
Total
5 18 6
Panned for Usborn In 7th.
Salem 000 000 00
Hits 200 011 15
Tacoma 010 000 X 1
Hits 200 101 X 3
IP AB H R XR SO BB
Osborn 6 30 3 1 1 2 6
Kipp T 22 6 0 0 8 5
No error; WP, Kipp, LOB, 8-7, T-7;
RBI, Bache. BH, Goldstein, SB, Bache;
DB, Baehe-aitford-Qulnn: Scott-Cavil
Ho-CloKLsttin; Klpp-Bache-Qulnn. T.
1:35, Umpa., Iloovttl, Hanlch.
Short Scorea:
Yakima 002 030 13010 1 0
Spokane 100 001 000 2 10 1
Bradford and Tlwiera; Holder, Rocker
(I), Yeraa and Weatherwas.
Wenatchtt 000 000 011 3 10 3
Trl-Cltr 00(15) 01 Six 27 24 1
BreUlnter, Trelehl (3), Thompton (3),
Ferrarase (4), Ballard (5) and Ntalf
Nicholas and Ptsut, MeKeecan (7).
Tribe
hits for his seventh victory in
the opener. He was helped by
Andy Pafko's 29th homer.
Hiller, an ex-Yankee, spaced
seven hits for his ninth vic
tory against two losses. Bill Se
rena drove in three runs for the
winners. Ralph Kiner rapped
his 37th homer for the Bucs.
The Tigers were forced to
overcome a 4-1 deficit to beat
the Browns In the opener.
They won in the ninth when
Aaron Robinson, former Yank
ee and White Sox, singled Vie
Werts home with two out.
The 31-year-old Overmire,
who was able to win but four
games for Detroit in the last two
years, gained his fifth victory
for the Browns in the nightcap.
He allowed nine hits and walked
four but was strong in the clutch
as the Tigers left 10 men strand
ed. A home run by another cast-
off, outfielder Marv Rickert, gave
Wight the edge in the pitching
duel with Cleveland's Bob Lem
on. Wight gave up five hits to
six for Lemon. Rickert's homer
came with one on in the fourth.
Pierce allowed only six hits in
the second game, which seventh
Inning home run by Gus Zernial
decided.
The big bat of Joe DiMaggio
and some slick pitching by left
ltes Eddie Lopat and Eddie Ford
gave the Yankees their two vic
tories over the A's. DIMagglo's
three-run homer and two sub
sequent singles helped Lopat gain
his 14th win in the opener. Ford
checked the A's with six hits In
the nightcap for his fourth victory.
LOCAL UNITED PRESS ASSOCIATED PRESS NEWS AND FEATURES
Padres Trim Oakland Edge
With Twin Kill of Beavers
By JIM COOPER
(United Preu Sport Writer)
San Francisco, Aug. 21 u.R
The two top teams, Oakland and
San Diego of the Pacific coast
baseball league, turned in out
standing performances this week,
with second-place San Diego
taking the honors.
The Padres, with their double
win Sunday over Portland 5 to
and 1 to 0 have won 13 out
of the last 14 starts. Since last
week, they've closed the gap
between them and Oakland from
seven to five and one-half games.
The Padres are definitely on
the move, and the question the
Oaks keep asking is: Can we
hold that precious lead?
In Sunday's first game, the
Padres turned in three runs
in the ninth to close in from
behind and overtake Portland.
Max West singled off relief
pitcher Bill Fleming when the
bases were loaded. Orestes
Minoso and Harry Simpson
came galloping home. The
home-run twins, Beavers Mic
key Rocco and Joe Brovla,
each slammed a homer for the
losers.
Al Olsen offered the Beavers
only three hits in the nightcap
Hot Grid Attraction Is
Booked in Philadelphia
By GAYLE TALBOT
(For Hugh Fullerton, Jr.)
New York, Aug. 21 W) -On
the night of Sept. 16 they are go
ing to play in Philadelphia a
football game which comes close
to being the greatest attraction
ever staged on any gridiron.
That admittedly is taking a
lot of turf, and we probably will
hear from the bowl promoters
about this. The fact that a cou
ple of professional clubs are in
volved probably will will in
flame the more virulent old
grads who think football Begins
and ends on the campus.
But if a meeting between
the Philadelphia. Eagles,
champions of the National
League, and the Cleveland
Browns, who dominated the
A 1 1 - American conference
through its too-brief career,
isn't the "natural" of the cen
tury, then you name it.
Incidentally,- that will be
quite a month September
with two championship outdoor
fights, the tennis finals and the
annual hysteria attending the
closing stages of the pennant
races, among other items.
For a one-night stand the
game between the two pro giants
will command as much coast-to-coast
interest as any event on
the calendar. Football men have
been talking it for months at
every fanning session, money
has been bet in quantities, and
Philadelphia's Municipal stadi
um, only slightly smaller than
the Grand Canyon, doesn't look
big enough.
In a sense it will be much
more than just a football
game. It will mark the climax
to an argument which raged
for four years between the
supporters of the two money
leagues.
It will offer the vindictive
National Leaguers afi oppor
tunlty to rub it in on the up
starts who cost them so much
money and pain before they
were squeezed out of existence,
and It will give Coach Paul
Hot- Rod Driver
Killed in Race
At McMinnville
MeMlnnvllle, Ore., Aug. 21
(U.R) A youthful Shaw, Ore.,
hot-rod driver was killed Sat
urday night when he smashed
through a race track fence.
Gene Gilbert, 21, was driv
ing in the second lap of the
third heat race when his car
spun out of control and went
through the fence, rolling over.
TUESDAY, 8:30 P.M.
MAIN EVENT
Lee Grable ts.
Lea Walllck
SECOND
Oc Duett. Ta. Cowboy Abbott
SPECIAL
Buff Bllverrteln rs. Jack O'RIlej
OPENER
Bin Melby T. Bob Cumminrs
SALEM ARMORY
Sponsored by Am. Lesion No.
Salem, Oregon, Monday, August 21, 1950
PCL Standings
(By the Associated Press)
W L Pet. W L Pet.
Oakland 80 59 .904 SFranclsco 73 75 .403
Snn Diego 34 64 .568 Portland 67 78 .463
Hollywod 80 69 .537 L Armeies 65 83 .443
Seattle 76 73 .510 Sacrament 67 93 .383
Sunday'! Result
Seattle 4.8 Sacrament 3-8
Los Angeles 6-3 Hollywood 4-4
San Diego 5-1 Portland 4-0
San Francisco 11-1 Oakland 9-5
Saturday's Results
Portland 5 San Diego 4
Los Angeles 9 Hollywood 7
San Francisco 11 Oakland 4
Seattle 8 Sacramento 5
and denied them a score. Vic
tory for the Padres came in
the bottom of the first frame
when Minoso singled, stole
second and scored on Jack
Graham's single.
In other games, Oakland and
San Francisco split, with the
Seals taking the first game, 11
to 9, and the Oaks capturing the
second, 5 to 1. Los Angeles took
the top game over Hollywood,
6 to 4, while the Stars won the
nightcap, 4 to 3. Seattle won
both ends of the double bill with
Sacramento, 4 to 3 and 8 to 6.
Oakland won five games to
San Francisco's three in the
eight-game series at the Golden
Gate town. The opening con
test, going to the Seals, was a
Brown's great Cleveland team
the chance it always yearned
for to prove it could wallop
anything in the National.
Now that the two mighty
teams are in the same league
they will, of course, meet each
other regularly through the
years. But this is, the first one,
the big test, while the two for
mer league leaders still are at
the peak. It should be some
thing to see, and don't step on
bodies.
While the Cleveland follow
ers are confident of the re
sult, they wish the show
down might have come a cou
ple of years ago, before their
huge Negro fullback, Marion
Motley, began to feel the
strain and slowed a step.
They fear, too, that their won
derful end, Mac Speedie, isn't
quite the pass-catching genius
he once was.
But that doesn't worry them
too much. They are convinced
they still have the best passer of
them all in Otto Graham and
the best coach in Brown, parti
cularly when Brown wants to
point for a single game.
The Eagles' followers are lust
as certain that Greasy Neale is
the best blooming strategist in
the business, that explosive
Steve Van Buren can run over
and around any defense ever
invented and that Tommy
Thompson is the game s top
passer.
But what the Fhiladelphians
really want to see is the Browns'
reaction when they run up
against a "real line," that is,
the set of 240 and 250-pounders
who deal out misery from the
Eagles forward wall.
They don't think, quite
frankly, that the Brownies
ever encountered anything to
approach these huskies m the
Ail-American conference, and
they very likely are right.
Page H
free-hitting "walkathon" with
new San Francisco hurler, "Tiny
Ted" Savarese nabbing the vic
tory in his pitching debut with
the coasters.
Acorn Al Gettel got his 12th
win of the year in the nightcap.
The Oaks won the contest In
the second when Earl Rapp
singled to right and Eddie Ma'
lone doubled, scoring Rapp. Bob
bie Hofman's' single brought in
Malone with the winning marker.
Los Angeles defeated third-
place Hollywood five games to
two in their series. The Angels
came from behind with a three-
run homer by catcher Ray Cash
in the sixth inning of the first
game.
A tenth-inning homer by Hol
lywood's Chuck Stevens gave
the Stars the win in the second
tilt.
At Seattle. Tod Davis blasted
a ninth-inning circuit with Bill
Ramsey aboard for the Rainier
win. The Kainiers broke a six-
all tie in the last of the sixth
for the nightcap victory.
Official Box
(First Game Box)
Portland (4)
5) San Dies
A H
A
ABO
Marqua.cf 6 1
Thomas,S 5
Baslnkl 34 I
o smitn.ir
o Mlnoso.ss
3 slmpsn.el
3 Grahm.rt
0 Wesl.lb
0 Btorey.Sb
0 Wllson,3b
2 Kerr.c
1 zuverik.p
0 a-Adams
0 b-Combs
Welmer.p
1 Tresb.e
e-Moore,d
d-Welteln
e-Embree
Baslnkl.3 4
Brovla.rl 4
Mole.U . 4
Ritchey.o 4
Austln,ss 4
1 3
Creel.p 3
Barr.rf - 0
0 0
Felmls.p 0
Totals 37 11 33
0 0 0
Total 94 10 37 8
x One out when winning run scored,
V Walked for Kerr In 1th
b Hit into double play for Zuverlnlc In
7th.
c Lined out lor Tresn in em
d Singled lor Welmalcer In 9th
e Ran lor Adama Id 7th.
Portland 100 102 00
Hits aio US 20111
San Diego 000 001 103 6
Hits 001 101 31410
Winning pitcher Welmatter. Losing
pitcher Creel.
Pitcher IP AB R H BR BM SO
Zuverlnk .... 7 31 4 10 4 0 I
Welmaktr .... 8 0 1 0 0 0
Creel 8tt S3 5 9 4 8 5
Fleming 0 oJus 10 1 0 1 0
Runs Marquei, Rocco a. Brovla, Smith
2, Minoso. Slmpaon 2. Left on bases Port
land 7. Ban Diego 10. Two base hits
Harciuez, West, Smith. Home runs Roo
r.n. Ri-avIs. filtnoaon. Sacrifice Creel.
Stolen Bases Smith, Marques. Runs Bat
ted In Rocco a, Brovla 2, mm won a,
Minoso, West 2. Double play Roc c o-Auflttn-Rocco.
Time 228. Umpires Car
luccl, Engeln and Bentz
Second Oame Box 7 Innings)
Portland (0)
(1) San Diego
O A
A H O
Marnuz.cl 2 0 4 0 Smith,!! 3 12
Thomas.3 ,3103 Minoso,ss 3012
Baa talc l,a 3 0 13 Bimpsn.ci a l l o
Rocco. lb 3 15 1 Orahm.rl 3 2 3 0
Brovla, rf 3 0 2 0 West.lb 2 0 4 3
Mole. I 3 0 3 0 Btorey.ao 3011
M astro. 0 2 3 0 Wllson,2b 2 0 11
Austln,ss 2 0 13 Uoore.c 3 0 4 0
Drlllng.P 3 110 Olsen.p 2 0 3 2
Totals 23 3 18 9 . Totals 23 421 8
Portland 100 103 000 4
Hit 001 101 03
San Diego 100 hod x i
Hits 200 002 X 4
Pitcher IP AB R H ER BB 80
Drilling 8 21 1 4 1 1 1
Oteen 7 24 0 3 0 0 4
Run Mlnoao. Errors Mastro, Minoso.
Left on bases Portland 3, San Diego 5.
Stolen Base Minoso. Run Batted In Ore
ham. Double olay Storey-WiUon-Weit.
Time 1:12. Umpires Engeln, Be nil ana
Carluccl. Attendance 10,0(18.
Ahnrt Scares!
Sacramento 010 300 0003 t t
Seattle 000 00a 003 7 1
Evans, Gables (9) and Raimondl; Brown
'and Bheely.
Sacramento 300 400 0 8 12 1
Seattle 500 013 x 8 12 0
Llerman, Gables (1), Gumbert ( and
Stelner; Ktndsfather, Fletcher (1) J.
Davla (A), Scants (7) And P. Warren.
Hollywood 300 000 0104 7 0
Los Angeles 001 104 OOx 8 1
Balveson. Mondom (7) and ratpxe.
Sandlock (7)t Mallory and Cash,
Hollywood ....... ODD 1DI 1DD 1 t 9 1
Los Angeles 030 100 000 03 7 1
Wade, Woods t. Karpel 7), Anthony
ra and Dapper: Munchlef and Novotner.
Oakland 020 102 08 11 0
San Francisco 100 000 0 I 5 1
Gettel and Malone: Lien, Dempser )
and Ortelg.
Oakland 410 102 010 9 11 1
San Francisco .. . W3 600 30i 11 10 0
Harrlst, Thompson 14) Nelson (8) and
Noble: Savarese, Keldman (61 and Parte.
Win Your Wings and a
FUTURE IN
AVIATION
at a CommUitaned Oflkar
with Hm U.S. Air Fore
Th Iwlt tlamlng Offkar
wW gfra yam fvil dmtallt
Room 211
United States
Poit Office Bldg.
Salem, Oregon
IT jtmt arc on an hi
nation you'll want 10 know
more about the opportunity for
Ariation Cadet training ... for
pilot or for navigator.
Learn about thia program fis
the endleaa opportanities
awaiting yon as an executive
in the MS. Air Force.
U.S. Am FMCC
Tag Applications
Available for Two
Special Seasons
Portland, Aug. 21 m The
state game commission said
today that tag applications
now are available for two
special hunting seasons next
fall.
One Is a Nov. 11-19 season
for cow elk In the Starkey
range between LaGrande and
the upper Grande Ronde
river. Applications must be
submitted to the game com
mission by Oct. 6. A drawing
will be held Oct. 10 with 250
tags to be issued.
The other is an Oct. 18-19
season for antlerless deer In
the Fremont National Forest
west of Lakeview. Applica
tions must be submitted by
Sept. 15. A drawing will be
held Sept. 19 with 1500 tags
to be issued.
Mangrum Shows
Style with Win
In Eastern Open
Baltimore. Md., Aug. 21 (U.R)
Modest Lloyd Mangrum claims,
there are a lot ot thinsrs about
this game I don't understand,"
but the rivals who lost to him
in the Eastern. Ooen tournev
think he knows everything about
tne game of golf.
Mangrum really gave the other
pros a lesson yesterday as he
won the 72-hole tournament with
a nine-under-par 279.
Mangrum started the final
rouna one siroKe behind co
leaders Clayton Heafner of
Charlotte, N. C, and Pete Cooper
ol Ponte Vedra. Fla. He was tied
with Fred Haas of New Orleans.
He birdied three of the first
six holes to take the lead. Haef
ner's putter failed him, twice
rimming the cup. Cooper drove
into a water hazard. But Man
grum remained calm and at the
end, he collected first prize of
$2,600.
Mangrum's final round was a
69. Heafner matched par with a
72 to take second prize of $1,900
with a total of 281 two strikes
DEER HUNTERS!!
GET
READY
NOW! -225
FOR THAT TRIP WHILE STOCK ARE COMPLETE!
CHECK THESE GREAT CAMPING SPECIALS . . . ONLY
AT YOUR WAR SURPLUS STORE . . . CASCADE MERC.
32.50 SLEEPING BAG Port down filled $yt FA
full zipper . Makes
27.50 WOOL FILLED SLEEPING BAG,
full zipper. Makes double
19.95 ARMY TYPE MUMMY BAG, part
down filled, zipper closures
16.50 AIR MATTRESS, super quality,
pillow attached, full size
COLEMAN POCKET STOVES
Burns red or white gas, safe, easy to use, com- $Z. Q C
pact Complete with coffee and soup kettle. WWmf
42.00 WALL TENT, 10x12.
Waterproof, guaranteed
46.50 UMBRELLA TENT, 9x9.
floor, window, door flap
57.50 9x11 UMBRELLA TENT, com
plete with tent poles, pegs, floor .
10.95 19-Pc. COMPLETE COOKING KIT. $Q QP
Skillets, coffee pots, soup kettles, cups. aTrt
TAD DC All sizes In stock. Priced way below rcgu
I ais lar prices. Guaranteed. Waterproof. Special
sizes and types made to order.
7.95 ARMY RUCKSACK, tubular frame,
five big pockets, easy to carry
7.50 PACKBOARD, tough canvas. Hard
wood frame and mighty comfy
2.95 OFFICER'S MUSETTE BAG Best for
short trips. Makes a nice roll
ARMY CAMPERS SPECIAL
Canteen 69c
Cup 19c
Mess Kit 49c
Fork and Spoon 25c
Web Belt 75c
Value $2.37
ALL FOR $1.50
7.50 ARMY HARDWOOD COT, with ex
tra heavy canvas, like new
9.95 NAVY MATTRESS PAD, swell for $() QF
that cot or camping trip Mm ,W 3
USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN!
A little each week pays for your needs at today's prices.
Hundreds of items. Nobody likes to lend his equipment
get your own on these terms. Ask us about it.
SPECIAL VALUE THIS WEEK ONLY 8x30 binocu
lars, coated lens, individual aye focus for accuracy,
with heavy leather case. $QA FA Plus
Guaranteed. Now only JJw Tax
Come In and look around. We're open every night, ex
cept Saturday, until 0:00. Browse through our new fish
ing department. B. S. with Bob Chambers, our fishing ex
pert, who never comes home empty handed.
Mail orders filled.
Cascade Mercantile Co.
Corner Fairgrounds Road at Church Street
( Jfr .
:' I
HO V WIIK PHy KM
as.
" w"l " 2 3, of Ft.
Worth, Texas, won trophy at
Chicago's Exmoor Country
club after defeating Mae Mur
ray of Rutland, Vt., 4 and 3,
In their scheduled 36-hole
match for the amateur title
of the Women's Western Golf
association tourney. (AP Wire-
photo)
behind Mangrum. Cooper had a
73 for a 282 total. Cary Middle
coff of Memphis, Tenn., moved
up to take fourth with 283 and
Johnny Palmer of Badin, N. C,
captured fifth with 284.
Hunter Drops Dead ,
Lakeview, Aug. 21 W) Hun
ter Jacob Hess, 57, Bandon, bag
ged an antelope Saturday dur
ing the special season and then
dropped dead. His wife was a
witness.
Lake County Coroner Everett
Osterman said Hess suffered a
heart attack
double Mm 1 1 V
$16 50
$12.95
$12.95
$33.50
$36.50
$45o00
With
$3.95
$2.95
59c
$
3.95
Include postage.