iday. January !, 1954 THK CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem, Oregon Pag 11 By FRED DOWN few York (U.R Coach Hank Oklahoma Aggies, era- ing their famous "deep ze technique in the final e and a half minutes, were i-ned champion of the All ege Basketball Tournament ith 6-foot, 10 Vi -inch Bob tick tossing in 23 points, the ies defeated Santa Clara, 6, in the title game to score ' 12th victory in 13 games. Aggies led all the way in iur-ridden game marked by t fight between the Aggies' i Fuller and Santa Clara's Skey Mount during the sec- half. es' 10th Min was the 10th time Okla la A. & M. won the all- N FARE 1 's Been a Pleasant Sports )arf Fearless Fraley Says By OSCAR FRALEY ew York U.R) This wasn't brightest or the busiest written into the sports 6k but as far as Fearless lley is concerned it was one (the most pleasant when all pgs are concerned. Maybe time is mellowing the (duct, but it seems that peo- on the whole are a lot nicer 5 less rushing for trains or nes and more sitting around ting up touches on the 19th e. )f course, the boys hurried en they had to, and it still ; a thrill watching them, e Fred Dwyer, the Villan . man, who started off the Ir with his mile sweep, and razzle-dazzle of Seton Hall tning the National Invita- tournament e's Operation there was lunch with the be," Mrs. Mildred Didrik Zaharias, and no hint in carefree manner that she lady knew she faced cancer gery. Later, when it broke, knew for sure that here the year's most courageous llete. Spring and the opening of WHAT IS BISHOP'S GOING TO DO? WANTED! FILBERTS AND WALNUTS AND NUT MEATS Highest eaab price delivery for orchard ran MORRIS KLORFEIN PACKING CO. 160 North Front St., Solam Tol. 37633 Oklahoma Aggies Boost tock in Winning college tournament and made the Aggies the odds-oa favor ites to win the Missouri Val ley Championship and a spot In the post-season NCAA Tourna ment. Santa Clara, which came east with a glittering batch of news paper clippings several weeks ago, tallied only 13 field goals during the game as it suffered its third loss in nine games this season. Kenny Sears, a disap pointment in his Madison Square Garden dating, man aged to tally only one field goal last night but contributed eight of Santa Clara's 30 free throws. Other Games Notre Dame and UCLA, the only other nationally-ranked teams to see action on New the baseball season, with the favorites pessimistic and the underdoes optimistic, which proves that baseball men nev er change. Dom Dimaggio tell ing you he had just about "had it" and then stepping down two weeks later. The chill wind off Atlantic Citys boardwalk as you watched Jersey Joe Walcott thsues m '9 ' coach fl i 3 ) jj A B more easy going. There train for Rocky Marciano, and the feeling that if the old guy tried it might be quite a fight. Vhich it wasn't. Then, back at Jamaica, watching Native Dan cer romp in the Wood Memor ial and certain he was a shoo in for the Kentucky Derby. Which made you wrong again, as Dark Star beat him. Cheered Middlecoff Rooting home smiling Cary Middlecoff in the Palm Beach Round Robin and then nerv ously driving the pace car in the Nascar 200-miler at Ra leigh, N.C., with 50 roaring hot rods snorting down your neck. On to Oakmont to watch the incomparable Ben Hogan win his fourth U. S. Open and certain that here was the greatest golfer who ever swung a club. Fine weather, fine golf and fine friends as Walt Burkemo won the PGA at Detroit and you passed the post-mortem hours with th likeable likes of Lswion Little, Sam Snead, Johnny Spence Claud Har mon and Toney Penna. One hundred degree heat at Forest Hills dulling the cer tainty that Mauieen Connolly would win U. S. tennis hon ors and the surpria that Tony Trabert did. Unimpressed by Rocky Marciano as he flat tened Roland LaStarza in de- Tourney Year'i Eve, came through with victories although the Irish were almos' upset by North western. In a game in which the lead : changed hands 11 times, th Irish finally nosed out t h Wildcats, S2-S0, after trailing, 40-39, at the end of three pe riods. UCLA led Michigan Slate by eight points at the half and went on to coast to an easy 67 57 triumph. Wichita defeated St. Bona venture, 77-71, Princeton downed Syracuse, 80-77, Ari zona routed Canisius, 79 58, and Michigan beat Marquette, 76-68, in the other key games on a rather sparse schedule last night. Bv Walt Dirzra fending the heavyweight crown. SERIES TIME Th World Series once more, glad for Yankees like Allie Reynolds and Phil Riz zuto and sorry for Dodgers like Peewee Reese and Carl Erskine, who proved again that nice, guys don't have to finish last. Surprise over Ran dy Turpin's poor showing against Bobo Olson, as the lat ter won the middleweight title. Football and crisp to cold. days at West Point, Princeton, Columbia's Baker Field and winding it up with the Army Navy game at Philadelphia. Lunch with Notre Dame's Jo hnny Lattner, whose poised (not posed) modesty showed that with kids like these com ing along the years ahead should be fine! WINS GIRLS' TITLE Brooklyne, Mass. Phylis Saganski, 12, of Hamtramck, Mich., won the national jun ior girls' indoor title with a 5-7, 6-4, 6-4 victory over Norma Harris of Brooklyn. WINS BOY'S TITLE Miami Beach, Fla. Mike Green of Miami Beach won the Orange Bowl junior boys' title, by defeating Eddie Ru binoff of Miami Beach, 1-6, 7-5, 6-2, 4-6, 6-2. BROWN WINS FINALS New Orleans Tom Brown of San Francisco defeated Fred KovaleskJ of Washington, 6-2, 6-0, 6-3, in the Sugar Bowl Tournament final. East Lansing, Mich. Two members of Michigan State's 1952 National Collegiate foot ball championship team were part-time Spartan assistants in 1953, Ail-American linebacker Dick Tamburo and tackle Gor don Serr. Phone 14-1451 195 S. Commercial " if CD to Like Robin Hood shot left to right in the back row: Gene Hoxsey, BUI Hunt, Wayne Doughton, Clair Alderson, Skeeter Baird, and Bud Prusiss. Front row: Andy Foster, Archie Bronson, Ron ald Lee, Verne Springer, Chuck Anglin, and Lewis John son. Not in the picture were Bob Norton, Ike Eperly, Steven Dawson, Cecil Newberry, Allen Campbell, Hugh Stalejr, Gilbert Mather and Bill Hammond. Jabberwalkies Review Good Year of The season of 1953 was a good one for bow-carrying hunters of the Jabberwalkie Field Archers club of Salem, one-fourth of whom bagged their deer. A survey of the year's acti vities was disclosed by Betty Norton, club secretary. The nineteen members get ting deer were Lewis Johnson, Bill Hunt, Steven Dawson, Verne Springer, Clair Aider son, Ike Epperly, Cecil New berry, Allen Campbell, Archie Bronson, Hugh Staley, Skeeter Baird, Bud Prusiss, Gilbert Mather, Wayne Doughton, Bob Norton, Chuck Anglin, Ronald Lee. Andy Foster and Bill Hamond. Gene Hoxsey killed a bob' cat with an arrow while hunt ing deer. First Surcharge Suit Dismissed Portland f) A suit against power company surcharges has been dismissed by Circuit Judge G, F. Skipworth in Lane Coun ty, a Portland attorney said here Thursday. It was a suit against the Mountain States Power Co. Still pending are Portland suits against two other power firms. Attorney Walter Evans said he was notified Thursday of the suit dismissal. Evans repre sented three Lane County householders, asked return of $580,000 in surcharges and an injunction against future sur charges. The power company levied surcharges, ranging up to 20 per cent of the monthly bill, for several months in 1952. The company said the surcharges were needed to cover costs of steam production in a low-water period. Evans said Judge Skipworth ruled his court could not take jurisdiction. Two Killed in Plane Crash Fairbanks, Alaska An Air Force C47 tansport crash ed at Mark Field at Nome Thusday killing two of the four persons aboard. The Ladd Air Force Base public Information office, re porting the accident, withheld names of the victims pending notification of next of kin. The PIO said the plane crashed shortly after taking off at Mark Field on a cargo flight. The Injured were brought to a hospital here in a Wien Alaska Airlines plane which landed at the Nome field about the time of the crash. QUEEN VISITS HISTORIC TOWN Teawamutu. New Zealand Queen Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh Friday vis ited Teawamutu, historic fron tier township during the Maori wars. ITS GREEN'S SPORTING SHOP FOB . . , EVINRUDi Ittl la. Commercial if if Jabberwalkle Field Archers who their deer the past season are, Hunting Kills were made in the seven archery hunting areas Hart Mountain, Canyon Creek and Mt. Emily areas in eastern Oregon, Tillamook Burn, Cow Crek, White River and McDon ald Forest areas in western Oregon. The deer were hit at distances of 10 feet to 120 yards, the majority being dropped when hit. Successful hunters used compsite bows with from 48 to 65 pound pulls. Other accomplishments oi members included winning of the state free style broadhead trophy by Ike Epperly of Sa lem at Medford in July. Marge Anglin won highest honors in the interstate tourney in Salem in August competing with the best In the Northwest. She won the women's free style division. NAMED Hollywood starlet Kath leen Hughes has been named Miss Cheesecake of 1953 by Army newspaper Stars and Stripes in Darmstadt, Ger many. The hazel-eyed blonde is 5 feet 8, weighs 125 pounds and has a 38-Inch bust, 36 'a -inch hips and 24 '.i-inch waist. She's 25 and a native of Hollywood. tAP Wirephoto) BETHEL FU MEETING Bethel Colored slides of life in Bolivia, taken by Jack Wells, exchange student to South America, will be shown at the Farmers Union meeting Monday night, Jan. 4, at 8 o'clock. In the 1950 U.S. census 30 U.S. states showed a net lots in population. WHAT IS BISHOP'S GOING TO DO? Woman Tells Of Slave Camp Camp Friedland, Germany VP) A 35-year-old German woman from a Soviet slave labor village in Siberia (aid Thursday she bad seen 120 men shot down because they dared lead a strike against the Russians. Brigitte Gerland, arrested In Dresden in 1848 while a free lance journalist, said she had been sentenced to five years hard labor by a drumhead Soviet tribunal without ever being told why. Her five years expired in 1951, but she was not released then. She was freed this week and entered West Germany. She said that after a brief In terview with Soviet secret po lice in Dresden and the rapid fire passing of sentence on her, she was shipped to a slave la bor area at Workuta, inside the Arctic Circle in Siberia. No actual prison camps ex ist at Workuta, she said, but Soviet soldiers form a ring of steel about it, leaving slave laborers to move in compara tive freedom in the guarded zone. More than 80 per cent of the workers at Workuta are Ukranians, she added. New Move in Timber Dispute Albany William, Mildred and William R. Volkman, de fendants in a suit brought in circuit court here by Dick and Edith Craft in a dispute over ownership of timberland ii eastern Linn county, have fil ed an answer and counter-claim in which they ask a $34,525 judgment against the plaintiffs, The plaintiffs had asked in a suit filed previously for an or der excluding the defendants from the disputed property, lo cated in the Roaring Rr er area, and giving the Crafts clear title to it. Ruling of a timber sale con tract signed by the litigants as invalid is also asked as an in cident to the order. In their answer the Volk mans assert that the contract is valid and still in force but .that the plaintiffs have violated it in that they had forcibly ex cluded the defendants from the timberland. Ike Pardoned 11 at Christmas Washington U.D Justice department records disclosed today that President Elsenhow er granted Christmas pardons or commutations to 11 past violators of federal law. There were no prominent individuals among the recip ients of Mr. Eisenhower's ex ecutive clemency, end all had either completed their prison terms or had been otheiwise at liberty, in most cases for years. In the case of the pardons, Mr. Eisenhower's action, tra ditional with presidents at Christmas time, restored the civil rights of the individuals Involved, including the right to vote. It also Is a recognition by the government that these past violators of federal law are now leading upright lives and have fully paid their debt to society. 497 Locker Plants Operate in Oregon At the year end 497 refrig erated locker plants are oper ating under state license In Or egon. Of these, 22 are of the new warm room type, the state department of agriculture re ports. During 1953, 10 locker plants closed doors, four of them because of fire, other damage or obsolete equip ment. The closures were off set by 12 new plants, mostly of the warm room type, says Robert Pentney, locker plant supervisor for the department. Some plants have reduced the number of lockers for rent, but one fast-growing section of Douglas county has a short age of lockers. Several of the plants have diesel or gasoline electric River" ordinance which was etandtiy equipment In case of approved by the chamber di power failure. I vision in July, then rejected in October when members fully SERVICE STATION OWNEH discussed its various provisions. nuns vui ui uas i Clifton Forge, Va., W ! Mayer Milton B. Whiting owns a chain of 15 service stations and nine wholesale outlets, all selling gasoline. Today he ran out of gasoline. or. r. t Lu, hjx Of. a. can. a DBS. CHAN and LAM CHINESE NATUROPATHS Vpitalrs, Ml North Liberty Offlet wa aaturdar 0l7. IS to I m.i I M 1 p a ConnlutlM. ftloed prunrt and artat UiU irt frt f chtrit. Prtctlefd iloca Itll WrIM for unitm tin. "' 1 J A BOUQUET FOR HER QUEEN .,....., Queen Elizabeth of Great Britain bends to receive a bouquet of flowers from 4-year-old Mei Kainoma Ganilau when the Queen visited the Fiji Islands recently on her tour of her empire. The little girl is the daughter of the second-in-command of the Fiji Batalion now fighting in Malaya. (AP Wirephoto) Wild Welcome Given New Year Over Globe I Br Tht Awocltt4 Pru I That brand new 365-day wonder, "Kid 1954," got a wild welcome Friday as he leaped into the world arena with ev eryone admiring his "peace" punch and praying he could keep up the promising pace. At any rate, the kid kayoed "Old Man Blues" with a flurry of horn-and-cow-bell blows, socking spirits, and righto and lefts to the pocketbook. Plan Changes Subpoena Rules Washington W) Sen. Know land, R-Calif., said today the Senate Republican Policy Committee may study a change in subpoena rules, but he de clared there is no GOP move afoot to curb the scope of in- vestigaitons by Sen. McCar thy, R-Wis. Knowland, the Senate ma jority leader, said in an inter view the policy group may look into the wisdom of re quiring approval by a commit tee quorum a fixed number of members that varies by com mittees before issuance of any subpoena for witnesses or doc uments. This issue was raised last month when Chairman Velde, R-Ill., acted alone in signing a subpoena for former President Truman to testify before the House Un-American Activities committee in the Harry Dexter White case. Truman refused! to honor the subpoena, not be cause of the way it was issued, but on the ground that Con gress may not require an ex president to testify. Albany Draws Peddlers' Law Albany An ordinance call ing for licensing and regulat ing of peddlers and solicitors may be introduced to the Al bany city council Jan. 13 by the retail division of the Al bany Chamber of Commerce. Don Sissel, retail division chairman, has mailed copies of the ordinance to businessmen. He stated the chamber is anxi ous to get th views of busi nessmen since the ordinance provides for licensing of all peddlers, whether or not they are residents of Albany. Such a provision is necessa ry, he noted, if the ordinance is to be considered non-discriminatory by the court. The ordinance is designed, Sissel said, to discourage ille gal and unethical practices. It takes the place of the "Green FIRST... for the fuel that is clean, efficient and economical use "Proo'tO'loco" CAPITOL LUMBER CO. PHONE 3-8862 if W r5 In New York's Times Square a police-estimated million rev elers, five times the number of last year, milled along the Great White Way and cheered in the new year. Both the 20 degree cold and the excitement kept the gay throngs moving. For 25 minutes before 12, and a half hour after midnight, traffic was stopped in the square and the merrymakers allowed to surge through tha treets. It was an orderly crowd. Bars, restaurants, theaters and night clubs did a booming business throughout the nation. Tariffs ranged from "no cover" at all to $25 a person in the swanky Manhattan night spots and hotels. Thousands also celebrated in at-home parties. The devout crowded into churches and parish halls for traditional watch night serv ices. In Augusta, Ga., President Eisenhower attended a small party at th Augusta National Golf club. London's famed Picadilly Circus drew the usual mass of midnight revelers. The statue of the Cupid Eros got a pro tective wrapping against the usual pranksters. Hotels and night spot throughout the continent re ported sellout business at very high prices. For the Best In FUEL OIL GEORGE CADWELL OIL COMPANY 25th ind Slit . Mom 2-7431 To Our Many Friends and Customers LEE BROS. Furniture and Re-Finishing Co. 4020 Stote St.