Page 2 Section 2 PCC Fare Features Beavers Vs. Huskies, Bears Vs. Indians Oregon at WSC, UCLA and USC Are Idle Undated PCC Bnskdli.ill i By THK ASSOCIATICf) I'KKSS Northwest giants of the Pacific Coast Conference basketball race meet Friday night and Saturday as the Washington Huskies play' hrrt to the Oregon State Beavers. And at Palo Alto, the confer ence lending California Bears hive a date Friday night with the unpredictable Stanford Indians ("il has an open date Saturday when Stanford hosts Santa Clara. ' l.'CLA. like California undefeat ed in conference play but with one less victorv. is idle this week end. So is ISC. Another series ! sends Oreson to Washington State. I .Must Step (i a mitre Both Washinglon and Oieyon Stale split series with Stanford. The Huskies have a 5-1 confer- ence mark; the Beavers 2-2. The' Fuskies have the advantage of ! tiieir home court and a pair of bi'4 fellows in Bruno Boin and tuug Smart who could put the Beavers virtually out of conten-1 (ion should they win the pair, Washington's big job will be stopping Dave Gambee, who has a .conference scoring average of l!t points per game. Boin has a 19.7 mark while Smart isn't far behind with 17.8. Leading the scoring parade in the PCC is Washington State's f-arry Beck with 21.2 although his team has only one victory in five outings. ' California beat Stanford once this season, 59-45. Since that time Carl Isaacs, a star end in football; who , played in the Kast-West game, nas rejoinea inc aiiinitiru j I)(1,1M.'IU(11I JsqitriU H1IU WI'II NIC starting center spot. His return, plus the home court advantage could make a differ ence. Isaacs scored 17 and 10 points in the two games against Washington. California's biggest job, how ever, will be to curb Stanford's forward Bill Bond, twice voted the playef-of-the-w e c k in Northern California. He scored 45 points in the pair against Washington. The assignment of guarding Bond probably goes to Cal's Capt. harry Friend, who had averaged 1!) per contest, and held Bill to 11 when they met. Anne Quasi in ! 1st Round Win FORT LAUDK11DALK. Fla. UP Anne Quasi of Marysvillc, Wash, advanced to Ihe second round of the Helen I.co Dohcrly Amateur (inlf Tournament Thursday with a fi-5 triumph over Margie Bums. ' Carrying a one-stroke lead at the Hid of nine holes. Miss Quast crushed her opponent by winning the first four holes on the back-j i!e. . ..... tt ' 1 he win pill Ihr Marysvillc miss, in a championship lirnckel hat-1 wnn aiary Ann Hcynoids oi iloan, Ca., Friday. " C.AVII.AN VS. MAHTINKZ NKWAIIK, N.J. tUI'l - Kx wclterweiplit champion Kid (iav ilaa has agreed to meet Vince ilartinez of Palerson, N.J., in a in-round hout at the Newark Ar mory, Feb. 2fi. it was anmium-cd today by co-promoter Willie Gil JcnbcrK. Tlli nSDAY'S l'li:HTS llv THK ASSOCIATF.K I'KKSS " l.dS ANGF.LF.S - Tombs'nnc Smllh. ltli'j, l.os Alltclis. mit piiinted Don Jordan, H'i, l.os An pi'les, VI. tension fen - "-' '"',-!y ' f 4 '.'i'J?l,iw.fifj "fei 1'"!'' "I;:''fi I PALM SPRINGS, Cllf.-Jlm- , my Itrntiirrl. drfrniltnx champ- 1 Inn In thr $ 1 5 .0(10 'I huiitfrrhlid Inviiatinnal golf tnimiry. w intra a his l.-fniit pult slnp 1 inelies frnm (hp tup in Thursdat'i flr.t ' round. It would hne gltrn him a hirdlr 3 on Ihr Uh hntr. hut hr finished with a (!. Ihtrr t token hrhlnd the hitdrr. lAP W Irrphotol JOE I'AI.OOKA . of--. I . ESfetttlfclttavJMf'' FiSt. CJ AT MY ULBEGLAO Vie A-JIB'E'EE S THfLP V0U 8ULP P'X TH' 01 W, MR . C " , 1 T Fighter of 14 I V'-lW jbj NKW YOHK Floyd Pallrrion, 22, the worlds heavywrlffht boxing champion, holds (he Kdward J. Neil Memorial award pre sented him as the flghlrr of the year at last night's Boxing Writers aHsoelation dinner. The plaque Is awarded annually In memory of the former Associated Press boxing writer who was killed In ItyH while serving as a war correspondent In Spain. Patterson, who was 22 Jan. 4, won Ihe title Nov. .30, becoming the youngest fighter ever to hold Ihe title. (AP Wirephoto) . 'I'll Get Him,' Says Hurricane of Flovd PalhM'KOii Earns Award as Top Fighlor By Ml It It A V ROSE NKW YOHK 0T On the surface everything was sweet and peace ful at the annual dinner of the Hovinc Writer. A., lost niKhl. I Hravvwoicht champion Hoyd . ..J .' ...I .1 f" i - pniirrsnn mid snnrls co umnisl yrmy ;rahnin of the New York .i,,,,,,,,,! . American received the main awards.- Kvon Julius land, chairman of the New York Stale Athletic Commission, was content just to hand Falterson the Kdward J. Neil plaque as Fishier ISYjjro Trams Muter Touriu'v in Kentucky I.KX'NCTON. Ky. if Neuro ,..t,.,l ...ill ,-nmn.itn In thn .,., i ' ir.il lo.iilino In M.e state hich school haskelhnll cham-i ninnshin this vear lor the first tune in the hislnrv of Kentucky. Seven W.'ro si hnols which bold mrmherslnp in Ihe Kentuckv Hiuhl nmersnn won a snlil decision School Athletic Assn bae notl-',,vl'r Jackson at Madison Siuare fied commissioner Ted Sanlord . they .nullify In enter district tour-, (laments which open next month, ( hips Kcmovnl From Kll.ow of Willir IVp 1 HOLLYWOOD. Via. tJP - farti hine and hone chips won removed surgically Tuesday from the Irlt elhow of W.llie Pep. former world's (cilhrrweiyht h o i n r champion. , 'Ihr aim Will he kept in a cast ahoitt in il.ts hut Mr. Martin lo iit'llf. who iiperatrd, said he r peclrd the oper.ition to he a com plete suceev-i. WII.I.AKII M S 6 KKI T T Nl'W VOIIK 11 1" -- .! Wil lanl, suttnl fi fret, 7 nuhrs. u,i llu t.tlU'sl o( Ml -v e" l y h I ' ehainpums wlii!. rritun Camera, TO MONOK I X IKIX Kll NEW YOHK 'II'1 -- Tommy l.ounhrnn. former It'lit heaw- weight champion, will he an lion- orett vuest ai lite nist annual tun nrr of the New York Homiik Man agers' Asmi, Saturday muht. t.OI F FttliT LACPEIIOALE. Fla. - Marlene Steart was 5 tindei par for it holes a she bested Mrs G. P Wilson Jr. It and 4. in Ihe In: teund p!.' in the Helen Lee Poheity Am.ituei. P T TE.L A'E H5 TO ALrt TKf A'ilF Y T lPAvE M HfBf ...I 0 6LADLV ma. CAR FT? M' P-CaEO VC'J LP.' r ML'GHTEa... rM2 -JLl the Year of the Year without putting the rap on anyone or anything. But in a far corner of the grand ballroom of the Roosevelt Hotel, a tall, broad-shouldered fellow sat and burned. "Walt and See" "I'll get him the next time. I'll show htm. I'll chop him up some thing awful. You wait and see." The words came slowly at first ' J'" in fr"m Tommy "m. "III. nif frinn. ... lie ttns my friend. ' s.ild Tom-1 my. 'hut he ain't any more. I'll set nun in .nine, mats my next IW-'fiRhl. lliin and me for Ihe title." , """ " (olleae. m" I Thcv succeed Jim Owens, new- !'l beat him Ihe Inst lime and,y named head conch at the I'ni he knows it." replied the Hnrri-1 versity of Washinslon, and Tom cane. "I made the ihl. He didn't j Tipps, whom Owens look with do tiotbins to me. He' only fousbt a couple of seconds each round So he sot the decision and he sol to lisht Archie .Moore and he won the title. It should have been me. N"1 111 K''1 ain't my ,ricnd "' m"ri'- 1 htrn m','l 111 anynni- before but now I'm n,il" - !" tnnien last June H to earn the ' Moore, tie then kmuked out .ioore in tne nun round lov. mi lo succeed me retired itocKy Marciano as heavyweight cham pion. A Patterson -Jack son tille fiyht fur June has not been made yet hut everyone seems to think il will. I nitfti Press Stuff ( nrrrspnntlrnt quite naturally enrircl up on lhe n"vin ator liith the " 7 h Washington Saturday night. The Neil award is named in' NKW YOHK U'l't-Jne Wilmnn camp bowling team. Ultimately hoh "or olii? eiuterUivJe CiurVJ memorv of the former AsMiaatetl has heen in nianv touch matches .foe's team and the McChord Air Few fh hown up in the KACI.KS SIGN LINEMAN I'nvss 'hoxiny wr.ler . sho was during a 38-vear 'career in which Field team met for the Ninth PHILADKLPH1A 'IT) - Line killed in l!i:t8 while sen in" as a he has won seven national match Service Command championship The waters of the Appiegate are men Aha Gihron and Ken Huxhold war coi rt'spondent in Spain. tKamo championships and rolled and Joe's commanding general hlT.V'u inn on1hinr tiTcr"imni1VivV1re hine 5,Knpd lhelr 1957 contrao,s his way into the howling Hall of i was on hand tor the rollolf oc-1 kochc batn. The hn run of Meei- with Ihe PhiladeJphia Kagles. Gib- Kame, but the tought'st of them copying a camp stool on the ad-' J;o fIa!'h', rinlim" la b 11(,p ron joined the Eagles late last I'Yv ami Gibson Kiach ':,U ttus n l",,,,l,,,i,ni1 performance joining npproach. tmJrriipte'for ou'" 'di: : season after a seven year tenure ! for a I'mnT-il i K.-u-li tf-uiiunn on came unit Meek end. Kreh rtt are attniii tht with th Clpvpland Rrownit. whil Australian Srillifilials i MKl.lUH'ltNK if Shirley Kry of St. IVtershtiig, Kla . and Althea G'hsnn of New York :inceJ WeHnetjiv tn tho .Mni. finals of Ihe Australian Women's keep pace with a tremendous up Singles National Tennis Champion- surge which has boosted its par sli pv ticipants over the 20 million mark Mu Kiv be:it Australian M:nv Yet the pressure of the largest Hawlon A I ii-7 in one tmarter- tMa ;,( Kvooyong Stadium Miss (;ibMn tteteated Pon- Smilham f , ti ;i m another qnarterlinal UK WES IIONOK FAN CHU'AiiO. CP' The Chicago i k uix too.iy veiei ted Wiluam Klose. '"'' of thetr oldest and most de- otett tans, tn thro" out the first ball betnie the opening game a.i'n-t the Milwaukee Hraes on April lt K1om 81. tnst saw the pl.i tn isnt. j lK...lHAr ftj iT T ulft OH PAOPY MAR T .VcKlS ...I BKOCGNT ACTin mighty swfET. VC-J SOU A NICE HOT LUNCH... FC VERYONE Field of Stars Poised to Run Tabori to Make U. S. Mile Debut Tonight At Philadelphia PHILADELPHIA on Laszlo Tabori, sandy-haired and spindly- legged Hungarian runner, makes his American indoor mile debut tonight, still a little nervous about the short straightaways and sharp turns on the boards. Tabori, who left his native land for the Melbourne Olympics and chose not to return because of the Communist oppression in Hun gary, arrived here last night to take part in the I3th annual Phil adelphia Inquirer Games. A firm believer in rigid train ing, Tabori has been working out at the University of North Caro lina, ritnning almost four hours every day. He even planned a workout today before tonights meet. Tonight's events will be the sec ond indoor appearance for Tabori. He finished second to Fred Dwyer in a two-mile contest in the Boston K, of C. games last Saturday night. He's hoping to do better than that tonight, since he prefers to run the shorter disfance. Tabori said he isn't shooting for a record in the Inquirer Mile. Like many European runners, he runs against the field, not against the clock. However If his competitors, tig jTen mile champion Tee Wheeler, man. Phil Coleman of the Chicago j Track Club. NYU's George King and Villanova s Johnny Kopil, really open up there's no telling what might happen. It was that way in London. Ta bori ran the mile in 3:59 against Chris Chataway and Brian Hcw son in a race in which all three finished under M minutes. Allhea Gibson, Fry Cain Final Tourney Round MKLBOl'RNK OH - Althea Gib son of New York and Shirley Fry of St. Petersburg, Fla., continued their domination of Australian tennis Fridav by reaching the fi nal of the Women's National Championships at Kooyong Courts. Miss Fry beat Beryl Penrose, the 1955' Australian women's champion, 6-3, 6-4, while Miss Gibson defeated Lorraine Cogh lan. 7-5, 6-3 in the other semi final. They will meet in the final on Monday. Lew Hoad and Neale Fraser teamed for t he first time to win the national doubles title from countrymen Ashley Cooper and Malcolm Anderson 6-3, 8 6, 6-4. Texas A. M. Srlect.s Itcmnitxlcr of Staff coi.i.i:;k station. Tex. ip Two youthful conches, .1. T. Kinc in mi; i mil'l.Mlv III 1 I'XilS, HIKI ,. . ,..., nuiiii.. r , ' d h s h . ' . Thj:. , ,,, ,-, ,, ,,a hing staff of Texas A&M him as an assistant. CITKI) FOR VIOLATIONS THKNTON. N. .1. (I'Pl-Ceorpe Tase. former major Irasuc speed kins, was tasced with three speed- i"C violations Thursday by state Motor Vehicle Director Frederick I Ciscort Ir ulin rnt .UrnI f'-icn'c I 'drivers license. The ex-Washinc- ton Senators nullirlder is head baseball coach at Rutgers Univer-I sity. Wihium's Toughest Pin Match Knoched General Off Cliuir llv OSCAR KKA1.KV I Wilman ranks as one of the na - lins lop tournament stars. In be-; l"ccn matches, he currently is a ad-:howling professor who is 'teach- ing teachers" so that bowling can louinaments never can match one war-time game which Joe rolled ; ul,en he wa "the best bed-pan commando in I'ncle Sam's; Army." Close To llnmr Wilman recalls with a chuckle ( that, alter m emnt; his greetings hn l'M.1 "thev found mv tvu v we warm so they put me tn the medt-jthe cai corps at Camp Grnt. 111. He was given charge of the camp bowling alleys and enjoyed lile only M miles from home. Hut the net year he was shitj- By Ham Fisher Ik XSCWt'HIN I AO ES- MS GONNA THEUt S eNOliiN HAPPfN.V MCW PO THI Bf CWTW H4PPPJ. ' IVSV liS X II 1 .J FC VERSWE YCC CO, 165 - ) I v e" Al STEVE n t, YCC CO, 165 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL Masquerade as Lou Groza Ends JACKSONVILLE, Fla.Poslng as Lou Groza, toe" for newsmen here, too. FBI agents said Cleveland Browns placekicklng star when he ap- Brown traveled up and down the east coast mas peared here recently, this man was Identified by queradlng as Groza for about eight months. The FBI agents as Anthony Brown, of Philadelphia, Inset, at lower left, Is Lou (The Toe) Gcza as after they arrested him Wednesday at Miami on he actually looks. (AP Wirephotos) bad check charges. Brown holds up his "kicking Big 7 Confused, Missouri Upsets Fearless Iowa State Another Surprise When Wichita Tops Ags By KD W II.KS The Associated Press That'j a co.y merry-so-round they have coins in Ihe Bis Seven conference basketball race. Kan sas is "unbeatable" e x c c pe t asainst Iowa f'tate and Mis souri can't beat anyone BUT Iowa State. It was Iowa Stale's Cyclones who put an end to all that Wilt Ihe Stilt nonsense by junking Kansas's unbeaten record and No. 1 position in the Associated Press poll last Saturday. men Missouri up ana ooppea Ihe Cyclones, who had scooted away up to No. 3 in' the national ranking this week. 6:1-66 in over time last night. Upset? Not for OTI Favored . . . Against OCE By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Oregon Tech is heavily favored;!": "Y''"1 ,Z"."lmX:f tu run lit 111 mi ii ui 1111- vi i'himi Collegiate Conference standing after it meets Oregon Collene at Klamath Falls Friday and Satur day niphls. Oreaon Tech has a 4-2 record. Orecon College is 2-3 In nlhrr UfwkoitH rnnlWotirf ,lf. linn Portland State 2-3 will he ! at Kastern Oregon Southern Oregon, the other con-'C"" j ference team, will he idle. nod to Kort l.pwis. Wash., and , then, in the final game. Wilman rolled II straight strikes. "The general has never seen a 300 game, whispered one ot the general's aide. "If you strike out. he'll give you a two week furlough with (till travel time." Away From Home .lor hadn't been home in ninY months. All he needed was three straight strikes to win the match and the trip, "Well, I gut two of them, he recalls ruclully. "The final hit was as good as any of them but the 10 pin stayed up and I 'oiled only' As tlir 10-nin trelered. howe.rr. general leaned forward so far that he tell o(f the camp tlool on his (ace. "I didn't get the furlough." .'oc, says. "But the general sent me a leiler saing 1 was the only PKC w ho eer knoi'ked a general otf his chair and didn't get coiirt CHARLIE CHAN CHINESE MEDICINE AND HERB CO. ' NEW LOCATION SO. AMI I.FSI.IK 1193 I.KSI.1K OHirf Hour! Turi. and Sal. a. m i . tn. I. V. rON. BkSSUT Mizzou. The Tigers had handed lowa Stat. (2-21 its only other de feat in conference play 77-59. Wrecks Title Bid The second defeat just about wrecked Iowa State's bid for the title, since the Cyclones must face Kansas atfain, (Feb. 2 at Kan sas. Missouri, with a 2-3 record, is just a spoiler. The Midlands had another sur prise when Wichita defeated Okla homa A&M 52-48. It was Wichi ta's second victory ever at Still water, Okla., first since 1954 and all but crumbled Aggie hopes for the Missouri Valley champion ship. Those were the only two stand out games in yet another night of Fishing Report NORTIIUKST North f oast stream arr in good rondtdon but walrr itill rnld. Strpl hfad angling pro i per U are only lair for Ihr wrrk f nd unleit water be romn warmer. Streams in the Tilla mook arra are low and clear, sterl- head re hit Hue fairly well lor drift- era. Some good ralrhes have hern rivers near tide and In upper river hole. The Nestucra has been fair. hut lots of boat have hern plying river level before new" run of fish i' food Irnhft i needed to raise appear. SOITHWEST Srrelhead ant line If generallv ipotty to poor In trie central Doug las county it ream.. The North Imp qua is very cloudy and ihe south and upper main river muddv. Water ...tL -. k e ' Tenmiie iaki are both head annum si.rlhrad anitiin, .i, mam .viiiiu-nma rivrr n lair to rood and (sir In the eaL ind ihe wei forki. t nrs the Coqiillle rUer rlear. sterlhead anKhn will be poor to fair. Striped hi annllnr In Uih mui slouch I only lair. The Rogue river was hlih and tnuctdv after Ihe last week-end storm, but It li rapidly droppnir and rleartnjt. Steelbead ilsh- thh eek. if the weather turn, rold. (resh nr cluster eics used in the weather remains (atrlv nirni. be best, but If '0J.,,0W blhohf1Ur.rL,0Jr,,i, p,Vv i catch. , iBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBiiBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBaBBBBi YOU GET Prices Effectiv Friday and Allsweet Margarine lb. Pkg. with 10c Coupon Without Coupon 29c SWIFT'S FRESH FROZEN H4MBUDGE8 PATTIES r:.!51 Without 15c Coupon 49c VISTA IGA-STATI ST. IGA-ORCUTT S IGA EMERY'S and QUAIL'S IGA FOODLIMERS W.M wtm llwrif Richt tn Limit Quantitira' meager action due to midterm examinations. John Stephens, Lionel Smith and Bill Ross got the job done for Missouri. Stephens and Smith each canned three free throws and Ross added a field goal for all of the Tiger scoring in the overtime alter a 61-all deadlock at the end of regulation time. Blew 8-Polnt Lead .Wichita, now 4-1 in the confer ence behind leading Bradley's 60 mark, didn't get the lead for good until the last 5 minutes at Still water. Joe Stevens sank a field goal and foul shot to do it. The Aggies, now 1-3 in Ihe conference, hlew an eight-point lead in the first hair. Elsewhere on the thin schedule, Marquette defeated North Dakota 72-57 with Mike Moran scoring 25 points: Miami (Fla.t almost im mediately wasted a 19-pnint lead in defeating Kentucky Wcsleyan 100-95; and Toledo, of the Mid America Conference, rapped Del aware 91-70 in a nonleague game. c,. ir . jtPll SOtl L tO 1rOff 79.7 Football Sitae ST. PETKRSBURG. Fla. (UP) Stetson University of Deland, has dropped intercollegiate football for 19.i7 but hopes to pio neer a "Southern Ivy League" of "unsubsidized football." Dr. j. Ollie Edmunds, president of the small central Florida uni versity, made the announcement to the school's committee on ad- ' ministration meeting here Thurs- day. TABORI TO Rl'N CHAPEL HILL, .C. H'PI Laszlo Tabori, Hungary's self-exiled distance runner, plans to leave here today for Philadelphia where he will compete in the Phil- ado nlufl Inouirer Track meet r ri- i Aav nioht Tnhnri aUn k onlnrpH 1 , , ,,. . . . , tin the Washington Star Games at Huxhold has played three seasons with the Eagles. MORE al IGA Saturday, Jan. 25 and 26 34 Salem, Oregon, Friday, January 25, 1957 Huskies Say Allord Is beaver to Mop Stady Given Job; Boin to Guard Ganibee SEATTLE (Special' Bill Stadv, Washington's 6-3 junior for ward from Silverdale. may hold Ihe kev in Ihe important basket ball series this week end with Ore gon State. That's the belief of Tippy Dye. tt.. U..CW montnr ftV0 hdS a5 1 ct'av the task of defend- ins ajjainst Boo Aiiora, usv, talented senior forward, in the Friday and Saturday night games. at Edmundson favinon ih nf hanriline Dave Gambee. Oregon Stale's scoring ace. goes lo Bruno Boin but Dye has reason to fear Allord even more Merit Plaques Awarded Trio Sportscastcrs Honor Patterson, Gifford And Courtney NEW YORK (UPl-The Sports Broadcasters Association an nounced today it had voted plaques of merit to heavyweight champior Floyd Patterson, pro football star frank bitlord ana Olymp'c 800-meter champion Tom Courtney. Those three, together with base ball stars Mickey Mantle and Sal Magli, will be honored Jan. 31 at the 10th annual awards dinner of the sportscasters. The dinner also will feature pre sentation of the Graham McNa mee Memorial Award to pioneer snortsraster Ted Husin? and the. first annual Ted Husing Award toj a recipient to be announced next' week. I The 21-year-old Patterson be came the youngest heavyweight champion ever when he knocked out Archie Moore Nov. 30. Gifford, a halfback, led the New York Giants to the 'National Football League title and was voted Most Valuable Player in pro football in the annual United Press poll. Courtney's victory in the Olympic 800-meter run was called by many the most exciting at Melbourne. 33.6 Leads U.S. In NAIA Tally KANSAS CITY ur Two West Virginians are locked in a duel for the NAIA individual basket ball scoring leadership. Ken Hammond. West Virginia Tech forward, barely held the lead after last week's games over center Joe Miller of Alderson Broaddus at Phllippi, W. Va. Mil ler averaged 3.1 2. trailing Ham mond's 33.6. NAIA statisticians said Thursday. StOl in the running for scoring honors are Pete Hughes of Hack burn College. Carlinville. III., with a 30.3 average: Gnyle Hoover of Sioux Falls, S.D., 29.1. and Don ald Gibbs of Iowa Wcsleyan, Jit. Pleasant, 28.3. Swim Slar Marshall Badly Hurt in Wreck MELBOURNE, vP John Mar shall. 26, one of Australia's great est swimmen; u-ac critirallv in. jured when his car turned over in-tii uiuiit's, oa nines irom .Mel bourne Friday nipht. Marshall is in hospital with a skull fracture and other injuries.: Marshall was driving to Mary-! borough to compete in a swim-1 ming carnival. As an undergrad uate he swam for Yale. WOODBURY HARDWARE CO. LIQUIDATING COMPLETE STOCKS General Hardware - Small Tools Builders' Hardware - Housewares - Clocks - Cutlery Guns - Sports Equipment - Fishing Rods and Tackle - Small Electric Appliances - Garden Tools - Paints DEALERS ONLY Invited . . . Come in immediately for best selections No Phone Ordert Accapttdl . Woodbury Hardware Co. 2262N.W.Nieolai Portland, Oregon than the sensational Gambee. Th bespectacled senior has been pure poison to vvasnmgion. Hit 21 sf 42 Shots In the two 1956 games and in the non-conference game at Cor vallis last month, Allord hit 21 of his 42 shots from the field and added enough free throws to give him a three-game total of 55 points belter than 18 per game. "The figures only loll part n the story," Dye comments, with more than the usual amount nt respect in his voice. "They don't tell how tough he's been on the boards and on defense nor how he's been at his very best in the clutch." Gambee has had a tougher time in past Washington games, what with Jim Coshow defending well against him last year and Boin in the December game. Big Bruno held Gambee to five field goals and 12 points while he was collect ing 30 himself. "I'm sure that Bruno won't be lulled into thinking that Ganibee can't kill us but Allord is the boy we must stop," said Dy Kmart vs. Gobie Doug Smart, who teams with Stady at Torward for the Huskies, will check OSC's 6-8 soph, Gary Goble, in Dye's man-to-man de fense. Guards Johnny Pariseau and Don Dorland will handle Ken Nanson and Jerry Crimins, respec tively. Oregon Stale has won tour of its last five starts at the Pavilion, totally short-circuiting the old "home court edge" theory. Tipoff is at 8:051each night. The Husky Pups entertain Sand Point NAS Friday and Seattle U. Satur day. The preliminaries begin at 6:05, five minutes after the doors are opened. BIT CHICO GARCIA INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UPl-The Indianapolis Indians of the Ameri can Association have purchased second baseman Lhieo Garcia from Wichita of the same league. Garcia batted .279 at Wichita last season. SCORES In the Alleys UNIVERSITY BOWL Commercial No. 1 League results: Valley Oil Co. 3. Western Pnper Conv. Co. 1: Pumilite Block and Sup. Co. 0. Johnson's Menu i; Capitol City C,nr Co., 1, Franz Bread 3; Portland Rd. Lhr. Co. 3. Lee's b'srd Ciira 1: Anderson Sporting Goods 3. Hayden's Cap. City Punters 1; Mvert Glove Co. .1, Gideon Stolz Co. 1. High. Uam series: Johnson's Meate 2.B(2; high team game: Valley Oil Co., 1. IU2; high Individual series: Orval Mull fi04; high individunl gme: Hoy Anderson Jiifl. Other high scores: Woodv Mvers 213500; Deanr. Curlil 20l3i',5; Hnv Anderson 573; Bill Hill crich 220576; Fred H.iasc 215 5S1. UB 800 League results: Cadwell Oil Co., 3. Ilipp's Service Station 1; Team No. 6 1. Roy A: Ken's Mobil Service 2; Kannier Motor 1. Tag Resell Pon liac 2. Independence Merchants 1, Earl Malm 2.; Nameless Food Mar ket 3, Independence Lumber 0. Higtl team scries: Nameless Food Market 2.414; high tram game : Namclra Food Market Blfi: high individual se ries: Ralph Lulav o( Rtpp's Servirt W4: high individual game: Kd Miotke of Ripp s Service 217. Oddities, split conversions, etc.: John Smith, team No. 6, shot 137 triplicate. (IIKKRY CITY BOWL Ladies City League results: tVb Lawless Masons 2. Ladd's Market 2; Mickey's Drive-In 1, Irnnnte 3; Chuck i Steak House 3. Karr's I; Hollywood Cleaners 3. Marshall's H Portland Road Lumber Co. 2. The JIutdAaasnoH pooq :j, aje IHJ-I"J Kay's 0. High team series: Gopd Hnusekcpplng 2fi3R. Htch tram name: Good Housekeeping 025. High indi vidual series: Norma Lawless Sri. High individual game: Casste Bain 217. Other high scores- Rose Karri a 21fl. Wilms Clark 209. Cassic Bain 534. Split conversions, etc.: Frieda Wil liams picked the 4-7-lfl split; Kay Krejei picked the 5-7 split. MRS. J. GILLARY, Detroit, Mich., str: "No need to cut tablets of St. Jmepb Aspirin For Children to five el act dosage. My children like the orange flavor." ST. JOSEPH ASPIRIN FOR CHILDREN