February II. 1952 4—THE MILL CITY ENTERPRISE SPORTS PAGE N. Santiam Fishing Now Within Law Under the new winter fishing regu­ lations recently set by the game commission anglers can fish the Santiam, Molalla, Calapooya, and main Willamette rivers for trout, jack salmon, steelhead, and salmon. Bag limit is two fish 12 inches or over per day and 4 fish in possession or in seven consecutive days. The 1952 winter fishing regulations cease April 19 with the opening of trout season and take effect again next October 13. Winter fishing deadlines for the Willamette valley streams specified are as follows: All the main Santiam river is open. North Fork Santiam is open up to the bridge at Gates, South Fork Santiam is open up to Foster, Calapooya river is open up to Dollar camp, and the Molalla river is open up to the North Fork. Upstream deadline for the main Willamette river is the mouth of the Calapooya river. Only the Willamette and its tribu­ taries below Oregon City falls were open to winter angling under last year’s regulations. Mill City Hi-Liles By GARY PETERSON Apologies have been sent to St. Paul high school as a result of a series of incidents which happened during and alter the recent game of basketball which was played on the local floor and which the Timber­ wolves handily won. Mill City was definitely in the wrong s > far as the said incidents were cha ¿ed to us, but various witnesses have said that the St. Paul players and spectators were not entirely pure and were not, entirely to blame for this series of events that culminated in the vocifer­ ous condemnation of the referees as such by various fans. Tuesday night the Gates Pirates won a hard-fought game with the local green-clad crew on the cracker­ box floor at Gates. It was an un­ timely loss for the Timberwolves as they dropped into second place in league standings as Sublimity beat Jefferson on their home floor. I wish I had a pair of bright green socks to go with a black leather jacket like a certain basketball player we all know. Think it'd score a basket for me? “The Bowery Champs” was the name of the film which was shown to the students of Mill City high school Wednesday afternoon in the monthly asembly. The picture was presented by the freshman class as their turn to entertain came up. Thursday night was “Play Night” in the local high school gym as the Girls Athletic Association organized the program as a means of getting out of the red. Volleyball, square dancing, and kangaroo soccer were among the games played in this successful venture. Honor Society members were an­ nounced in the student body meeting held Wednesday. The Student Coun­ cil has voted in favor of purchasing pins as awards for those who qualify for the society scholastically. About twenty or twenty-five students were named. Eldon Lents Hosts Scouting Committee The Cub committee met at the home of the chairman, Eldon Lents, on Monday to plan the February Pack meeting. Plans were made to have a “pot­ luck” dinner birthday celebration, the 42nd birthday of • scouting and the 1st birthday for Pack No. 84. The dinner will be held at the Odd Fellows hall on March 2nd at 4 p.m. All parents and their children are invited. Arrangements for renewing the Charter was discussed. The new Charter will be for 47 Cubs and will be sponsored by the P.T.A. as in the past year. Wright Truck Line Watch this car change the industry Full Soles and : Heels | BEFORE BUYING SHOES SEE THE MASON LINE the American road CHARLES UMPHRESS. Prop. | Open 7 A.M. to 7 P.M. | Gates high school's champion B league scorer, Marlin Cole, who has been building a record of points scored to a total of 381 for an average of nearly 30 points for each game played. The 6-ft. 1-in. center was in action last Tuesday night when Gates defeated Mill City 65 to 53 on their home floor. Cole is said to be the greatest scorer in the league _^ir<-nit history. (Photo courtesy of The Statesman) Mill City Grade School NEWS V. COL r* Miles in rich co!:«, i i". » growir? i. ilu ,vco cî th# C “’ernia fat' n mar’ .1, t th» f-rirq f sp'-d. t . Ml - . to M I. '-F- »’ '■ t-f ccl.’i ?axi’-'-US cu... I i.::ra i. .a.et Caiirct-—en» ci il » GO ii«w "Wool in C .’.iíornin" C';‘ori. Th» Sunshir.» Stai»'* de- * a»H »hour tliv-lr influe ne J. ito. .n li.» coai** imerinaiiv» » -in?, y - :d in ih» d»cj> »iia-vl . .,_r ar.J xounàxl cuicway lina*. Fifth (■rade Phyllis Bickett is still absent, Phyllis Pat was also absent. We are having a Valentine party in room six, all the mothers of the children in room six are invited. —Man- Boothby Sixth Grade We have a new girl, her name is Helen Ann Joiner. Some of the sixth graders had shots Tuesday at about 2:45. Bernice Slater has moved f rom school and the class will miss her. —Michael Peterson Herschel Clark was absent from school Tuesday and back again Wed. The fifth and sixth grade team played Stayton Tuesday. Mill City was the victor by the score of 37 to 17. Those who were on the team are William Clark, Larry Large, Michael Thomas, Michael Matheny, Arthur Cox, Ray Stiener, I.ahny Podrabsky. John Roten, Arthur Webb, Anthony Berry, Gary Bevera, Larry Kanoff. and David Jones; the game was on their floor. This is the second game we played and won. Mr. Todd is are coach.—Larry Large Bov Scout News—The meeting was held in the grade school Wed. night at 7:30. We practiced map reading and marching. There isn’t enough boys in the troop. There are many opportunities in the Boy Scouts.—Tony Boothby What makes Olympia so satisfying? For nearly half a century Olympia has devoted its skill in creating a light, yet satis­ fying beer. Today, the third generation of the same family is dedicating this experience and its modern facilities, plus the rare brewing quality of its famous water, to produce Olympia . America's Original Light Table Beer. “Its the Water” Dyche tightened his belt and took shipment. After piling up a stake as a dirt­ moving team hand on the building of Light Refreshment Beverage of the PIN, the Rough Rider hopped a Millions of Temperate People freight on west, lighting at Bridal OLYMPIA BREWING Cl. OLYMPIA. WASH. I $ * Veil* Oregon. ’Trade Mark» Reg. U. S. Pat. Off. First Skyline? . . . Bill Dyche was a man born to log He took a job in the sawmill at Bridal MOBKx xk x x x x xgx x x xxjQt XiMSKKagKßöö«!® a a a a a a a a a a a a.a a a « a’ a!« Veil but it was the logging operation, bossed by Bob Barr, that attracted him. The outfit was just starting to | use steam in that year of old, 1899. | X « The first machine was a spool donkey X so small that water to fill its pipes X X was packed to the works— in saddle- ! X X bags I X Bob Barr was a great logging chief, X according to Bill Dyche, and deserves to have his memory marked as one of the first to invent and rig up a sky­ line system if not the first. It was a trolley with grab hooks that carried NEW RETAIL LOC ATION: a big log at a trip over a deep canyon. East City Limits on Highway 222 Working into a blacksmith helper’.- job, young Dyche bad a hand in the Phone 3215 • MILL C ITY trials and errors that arrived at a successful skyline operation. Many, many are the stories, all vital stuff of the true history of West­ ern logging, that follow in the record of Bill Dyche’s logging life. I do wish he would write it, just as he has written his Tongue River. Wyoming, adventure. Mavbe Walt McCulloch can persuade him to do it. Here, in- i deed, would be real writing with the bark on. conk free and peeler grade. Would it make the grammar girls shudder? That’d be the added at­ traction. All Building Supply Needs FEEDS and SEEDS Do Your Planning Now for Next Season's Crop Dr-v« Orerdriw. and w-M* hr»» if orottob*a. optional at o»tra co»# tqwotnant, occoi- tortot and fn» »vhfoc# witfovf aahca. YOU WILL ALWAYS FIND AN AMPLE SUPPLY OF SEEDS AT YOU CO-OP STORE The Maples Cafe & Tavern Highway 222 lie also have a full line I12 miles Fast of Gates The *52 Ford is here . . . the cor that's designed to out go, out look, out ride, out value ond out last every other low- priced car—bor none! There are many, many reasons why thn built-for-keeps cor will do more things for more people at lower cost. But you'll see what we mean when you see ond ''Test Drive" the '52 Ford for yourself! F.DA.F. Ford Dealers | | Chuck's Shoe Shop: Kelly Lumber Sales — the ablest’car on Com* in ¡nd *T*$t Priv/it at your I Out of the Woods By JAMES STEVENS \ Great and Good Logger. . . Back in 1907 I was out on my own and traveling free. I wish the luck of the road had taken me then to the Tongue River country in the Big Horn Mountains of Wyoming. For I might have found a job in the woods up there, being handy with horses, fair with an ax and fast on my feet. And now I could boast that once in the old days I “set in” for Bill Dyche. He was the boss logger on Tongue River in 1907 and one of the best of all his powerful Western tribe. William K. Dyche dwells today in Klamath Falls, retired and full of years. Walt M-Culloch, who knows all the oldtime king loggers of Oregon, thinks that Bill Dyche is likely the "firstest” of them all, because of his inventions. I’ve heard other authori­ Oregon’s only touring hoop squad, ties second the motion. I’ve never the Pal Club Bombers, six young met Mr. Dyche, but I will if I live and Negro basketball players from Port­ he does. land, invade Scio, Wednesday, Feb. 20, to tangle with the McCallum Rough Rider. . . Chevrolet team in an exhibition con­ Where Bill Dyche and I might have test. met well before 1907 was in Southern The youthful Bombers, coached by Idaho. For a spell there my pappy Jackson Winters, ex-Portland U. ace, was a king snipe on the PIN—that have won 20 out of 25 games to is, a section boss on the Pacific & Idaho Northern Railroad. The place was up Weiser River Canyon, nigh Middle Valley—now, alas, “Midvale.” Young Bill Dyche wound up there, helping to build the PIN, after he was discharged from service in the date, and feature a pleasing style War with Snain. and ri; of play with lots of court-comedy In that war of the old, old days and ball-handling stunts. Bill was a Rough Rider under the mighty Roosevelt, fighting Theodore. His discharge money was not enough i to buy a ticket west of North Dakota, , What with the yellow jack and em­ balmed meat—apart from an occas­ ional Spanish bullet- a discharged veteran of that old-style war consid- I ered himself lucky to get out of the | uniform alive—as indeed he was. i He may have dreamed of a pension Use Our Modern Moving 1 but he looked for no bonus or college Vans Next Time You I education or home loan as reward for I toting a government issue gun at Move or Ship soldier’s pay. So the young ex Rough Rider was by Freight! [dumped from a train in North Dakota | when he was down to his last two I dimes and left to be a free man in a [free world. The season was winter. I The temperature was 20 below. But “Ship the WRIGHT’ way” I a man could “shin out” to be a con- Phone 125 Stayton. Ore. | struction hand on the new branch railroad that was building from the Oregon Short Line in Idaho. 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