Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 4, 1947)
sWThe) Statesman. Salem. Orsjaon. Sahgdar Octobt 4, 1947 - ; ' i -II -) i ; !' f I I I l 0 Kollin'Mong By iERiijT Stone There were a lot ef Just plain : sick people aroend the town yes terday si aboat It minutes U It had been ft gripping drama one of the most sas peBccfml moments ia world ser ies history sad Bill Bevens bad been m close, Jut one bit ter 'removed from Immortality terrible, a dismal climax for "Her" and his hometown i root ers and, yea, for Yankee fans in general. One oat to go, gy teatia themselves before ra diM all over tewav awaltta tbo pitch, beginning to believe that fate had picked out Biff Bill to rack the first ne-hltter In aeries history and then . wham! If ' ever pore anbelievlng shock was registered In the human eye " It -was present are and local radios : yesiexoay wnea uituc connect-, cd. I ' At that it was a' fine game , BUI burled a one hitter laeagn no sua give -a p an unpre- eodented It walks. And, Ironic ally . enooxh. IJagh Casey, the Dodder's ace fireman, was credit- Bearcats Sperry Paces Lillic Attack 'Cat T Offensive Produces 3 Scores By Jerry Stone I Jerry LUlies Willamette iBear eats, off to a bad start a week ago against College of Pacific, redeemed themselves in j good measure last night at Sweetland field as they rolled to a 19-0 tri umph over an offensively impo tent Whittier college eleven in Lfttie's home debut as 'Cat! men tor. The Willamette, much Improv ed in their "T" technique from what they were against the COPs. began rolling early in the initial quarter and soon left little 1 doubt in the ample crowd's mind as to which was the best club on the field., v All evening the 'Cats poised serious threats in the persons of Halfback Keith Sperry, a I light ning terror in the open field, Al Minn, another speedster via Ha nii tnH Al Wirkcrt who i made the Poet forward wall feel his weight in the line-smashing de wmtMtu whttttet til er, iss. .Tart BnkJaf J2 . TarS ra.Mtaf .4S .as .14 . Tatal Tare v. bum AttenaBtre . rae Cmplrte . rnn iBterccptcS- . rau Ari rmati rirt Dewas II- partmenL In addition Bobby Douelas did a smart lob of di recting the local , crew from his cruarter back slot, handling tne ball on the reverse which time and again saw Sperry and Minn shook loose tor good gains.. The LiUies initial score! came eight minutes Into the opening .best when Douglas returned a Poet boot to the Whittier 34. In eight plays the 'Cats were overj Sperry hitting the pay stripe on a one yard plunge. Feature of that drive was a 14 yard para from Douglas to Minn. Patterson's con-j! version kick was wide Of the mark. . The second period saw the tide swing to the Poets for the only time in the contest as the invad-i ers put together a drive which: began in their own 44 and ended up on the Bearcat one-foot mark-t er. It was the visitors one show of offensive spark during the evening, three first i downs being rolled up In the process but the Cat line made It futile with m tight goal line stand. Highlight, was a 30 yard aerial from Dick Tucker to Jack Fair. j V Lillle's crew began clicking again in the third, taking lthe rkkoff on their own 32 and marching directly to their Second TD in six plays, payoff being the fleet S perry's - 29 yard j jaunt around his own flank and over the enemy goal line. Reder's kick for point was wide. j The final Willamette tallies were definitely of the gift va-f riety. After Johnsrud had recov red a .Whittier fumble on the Whit 23 the Cats hammered down to the one-yard marker only tip be repulsed. The Poets chose to kick out of the hole but in the doing a bad pass from cehter danced wildly in the Whit end zone to be grasped lovingly by "Cat Quarter Earl Hampton. Rep eler's conversion try was good. I! The locals out-first downed the Calif ornians, 11-6, andT total ed 158 yards from rushing and passing to the Whits 80. ! j WWaasrtt Johnson Ercollni Donovan Patterson r. .. E . T waitUer i Kulzer ! Parker , Oak Chandler C . Boddoe . C JCukahiko .T Better E Douelas Q SpcrTy H Minn H Wsckert T I Dillon j Notfe Browneil . ITuckar Jarnarsjn Subs: Willamette: BacVa ' Noa. War. ren. Hamncton. Slanchlk, Burlelgti, Ewaliko. Line Johnrud. FiUteraid, Neroon. Mill. Kukahiko, Fletchall, Al lison. DeBord. Bowe. Patterson. j Scoring touchdown : Willamette 4 Sprrry I. Hampton. Conversions Reder. Officials: George Mimnaugh, tefertif; Jul Warren, umpire; George EmiRn, field Judge; Rube BitchelJ, head line- Crew s J" f - t " JACKIE ROBINSON ed with the win though uncork ing bat one pitch which shows that you sometimes : CAN get things the easy way. And among the most serious WaOloBJ Meet OSC, UO Both Slated By the Associated PrtM While Oregon State, defeated In a surprise upset by Utah last week, is In Seattle to take on Pest Welch's Huskies In a con ference clash, Jim Aiken's University of Oregon Ducks play their third straight non-conference foe, Nevada, in Eugene Saturday afternoon. ; ; : - Lon Stiner will stick by the ssme starters he used last week in hoping to quell the Huskieswho lost to Minnesota, 7 to 6, a week ago. Gordy Berlin will replace BUI McGovern at center and Brooks Blddle will go instead of Sam Robinson at halfback for the Washington 11 In last-minute changes. The Duck-Wolfpack fracas pits Oregon's new mentor against his old team, and the Nevadans outweigh Aiken's eleven 8 pounds per man in the line. The Webfeet are slight favorites Jo cop that one. Parrish Squads Swamp Rivals In Junior High Grid Openers Racking up scores with little difficulty against their lighter and lets" experienced opposition, two Parrish grid aggregations kicked the lid off the Junior High School Football league season Friday with easy wins over teams from Leslie and West Salem. The Parrish Car dinals thumped the Leslie Golds 34 to 7, In an afternoon fray. while their brother Greys stopped West Salem in their debut in lo cal junior high competition 34 to 0 under the Leslie lights Friday evening. Two hard-charging halfbacks, Deb Davis and Tom Blair led Bob Metzgera Cards to their win, the former racking up three touch downs and Blair two. Eighth grader Burt Harp played a whale of a game for Leslie. Harp did most of the ball packing, some nifty kicking, and a lot of the 1 defensive work for Harry Mohr's. crew, and eclimaxed his stint by driving over for the Golds' only touchdown in the final canto. Little West never was a threat to the Greys but didn't quit try ing. Their only real scoring bid came in the fourth period when they reached the Grey 15 yard line. A swift halfback, Jack Cal vin, was Bill Hanauska's best ball carrier. Richard Howard scored the first Parrish touchdown in the first two minutes of play and McAllister, Peterson, Covalt and Baggett got the others. Bulldogs Stop Stayton, 20-6 STAYTON, Oct l-(Special)-Pounding over two touchdowns in the first quarter and another in the third, Woodburn's Bulldogs whipped Stayton, 20-0, here today in a Willamette Valley leacue tus isle. The Initial Bulldog tallies came when Krieger ran an intercepted pass back 50 yards. The lone Stayton TD came similarly as Boedingheimer raced 70 yards in the second period after stealing an aerial. - DRAGONS WIN 2g- ! DALLAS The Dallas high Dragons scored an easy 26 to 0 Willamette Valley ' league . win over Estacada here Friday. The victors scored a touchdown, in each period. ; i Bevens, Woodburn, EBBETTS Field, Brooklyn, Oct I -CP)- Floyd Bevens' eyes were vacant of aay expression as he" f ambled along la chang ing from his uniform to street attire In the Yankee dressing room after his defeat In the fourth game of the world series today. I The big right bander, who was one oat away from tossing the first ao-hitter in world series annals, groped for words as reporters, feeling his re ' morse, slowly asked qaeatlons. Asked what kind of a ball - Cookie Lavagetto of the Dodg ers hit for bis game winning double In the ninth, Bevens re plied: "A high fast ball, a little on the outside." Later, while sipping a bottle ly shaken people, we, Imagine, la one Al Lishtaer, ear compatri ot, who traveled back to the Series especially to see "BeV perform. To hear that fourth game finish via the voice of Bed Barber, "the old redhead'', was ernel enough, but to have been on the scene as Al was, to have watched every movement of an' old pal Inning-, after Inning -as ho was seemingly on his way to an unmatched fcaV only to go down In the end well. It most have ' been ' just twice as heart- . rendlnr. We'll bet Al wishes . he'd stayed right here In ye old town V, , .' : ' Sara - Bill lost - bat his " no d o b b t - bitter disappointment should ease with the knowledge that he came closer ' than any ' other man to a Series no- no and yea have to consider that each r gifted gents as Christy aXatbewson. . Grover ' Alexander,' and Walter Johnson -and Lefty, drove also worked Series frays. And then just hew many one hitters have there been In tbo big show's history? Bub, yon can coant'em on a couple or three fingers . . . - ; The i reaction - yesterday Is pretty . well summed op in the case of. the ; gent who won - a one hundred buck pool as a re sult of Lavagetto'S fateful smash but who still wandered about . daedly,.mutterin: "Why did It happen?" ; . ' One of the points most mar veled at by gents out In the hinterland la the manner of re 19-0; s EtailDtfldgs Here Tonight! Booster Group Begins Action Over 80 persons were on hand Friday morning at the Marion hotel as the Salem Breakfast club was revived for the express pur pose of boosting Willamette and Salem high athletic programs. The group plans to convene Fridays proceeding every Bearcat or Vik ing home game. Further organiza tion of the group as well as adop tion of a new name will be mat ters to be taken up at a meeting of the executive committee early next wees. Officers elected yesterday In cluded Harry Collins, president; Howard Maple, Hunt Clark and Gene Vandenynde, vice-presidents; Chuck Barclay, secretary; and Lynn Smith, treasurer. Those present were entertained with Hawaiian songs rendered by a quintet of Willamette grid players including Charles Nee, Bill Ewaliko, Bill Kukahiko. Jim my Noa, and Al Minn. Also sit ting in were the remainder of the 'Cat club. Coach Jerry Iillie and w turner mentor Wally New man. ' Bend 11 Trips Axemen, 26-7 .1 BEND Bend's Lava Bears ran all over Eugene here tonight to win their second straight Big Six gridiron tussle, 28 to 7. Bill Sheff old - passed for two touch downs, and scored another on a 23 yard jaunt. Eugene tallied only In the fourth period. ) Swimmers have crossed the English channel 25 times, ten worn. en and 14 men having made the crossing, one man twice. of beer, Bevens shook bis bead when he was reminded he set a new series record by walking tea batters. "Every 'tuna yoa walk some' body, yeall get into trouble. A walk counts as much as a bit,' be added. , Before the series Manager Bucky Harris -confidentially named Bevens as his "sleeper." "Watch this boy In the series,'. Harris said of Bevens, who had Just completed a most dlsap pointingseason. "He's going- to give it aU he's got because he knows he will be pitching for his basebaU life." Harris didn't realize what a near-prophet he was. ' - - Manager Bocky Harris was cornered and announced- that Everybody ception given Jackie Robinson during the Series. Llghtner men tioned that not a boo greeted Jackie from among the 71,000 plus who tat In on the first game at Yankee stadium. Such Is pretty much indicative that the , fans are - not measuring the ' dusky Dodger star In terms of color but rather In the calibre . of bis performance, which means that he has been accepted Into the major 1 league fraternity as one of the boys .... '-' Oregon , State goes north . to Seattle today to take on the Waahlnx-ton Huskies, and we've a hunch yonll see a rip-roaring bunch of Orangemen, hungry for the kilL On the rebound from the listless ; showing against ; Utah, Lon Stiner's crew should ' be In an Ideal state of mind for ' today's, conference engagement ; Helping, too, will be the fact that Pest Welch's eleven Is def initely favored. The Beavers re member all too well that they were last week picked to spill the Utes. . Although rather fuzzy with the world series fever here we go once again stepping where no man should . dare to - tread meaning, more prognostications. Salem -19,' Albany 6; Oregon State IS, Washington 13. (yes, sub, a tie); Oregon 20, Nevada 7; California 2ft, St Marys f; VSC 20, Rice 14; WSC 13. Idaho 7; UCLA 20, Northwestern 12; Michigan 27, Stanford 7 ... Elevens Make Big 6 Debut Outfits Rated Even For Sweetland Clash The Salem hish Vikings and the Albany Bulldogs clash under the lights at Swr-iUand field, 8 o' clock tonight, inthe inaugural of Big Six league action for both clubs. The two teams are rated near- even In p re-game figuring, with Rex Hunsakers crew having? last The Salem high-Albany fray tonight will be aired by Al Sennas through the faciliUes of KOCO, 1490 kilocycles. Broad east tune Is 7:45. week dumped Lebanon, 13-7, while the Viks to date haye a 1-1 record with a win over ' Ro osevelt of Portland and a 16-0 loss to Klamath Falls. The Bulldogs will hold a weight advantage of six pounds per man m tne forward wall 177 to 171, and will top the Viks in back- field poundage as of the starting line-ups, 172 to the Salems 189. The Hunsaker's utilizing plenty or speed, operate from a T formation. One of their main threats wiU be Dick Graber, 200 pound fullback. Plenty of worry for Harold Hauk's outfit also will be found in the persons of Half backs Don McKay and Cliff bmitn. Hauk will open with the same line-up which took the field against the Pelicans last week Offensive Cog Carlos Houck will be at full and at the halves will be Bruce Barker and Deen Paulus Jerry Taylor will again direct the Club's single wing back attack from the quarter slot. In the forward wall it'll be Bill Rock and Lowell Spagle at the flanks, Wally Nelson and Chuck Baker. 180-pounders. at the tack les; those defensive rems. Bruce Harbough and Buzz Barnholdt at guards and Bob Seamster at the pivot post. Salem Rock Baker Barnholdt Seamster Harbough Nelson Pes. 14)...E -180)....T .(190).O. 182)C .(168)..G 180).T. 173E Albany (1M) USS use). 1S0) (175). (178). Workman B lazier Vance Saylor Burrus Olsen Spagle Taylor Barker Paulus Houck Haines . J02.Q(1 (144)..Ht 1S0) Jenks IS!). Smrth- .154)....H (175) McKay Graber .(175)...T. J00) Officials: Paul Warren. Portland, ref eree: bus Blgham. Portland, umpire: wayne Bauer, Oregon City, head lines man. Aumsville 11 Dumps M-City MILL CITY, Oct. 3-(Special) Aumsville's potent grid club racked up its second straight Mar ion county B league win here to day with a crushing 31-0 triumph over Mill City high. The winners rolled over single touchdowns In the first, second and third per iods and finished with two In the fourth. Sad "Frank She will Dodgers tomorrow." face the WOODBURN, Ore.. Oct 1-(JP) This la a broken hearted town and It has no love for Cookie Lavagetto. It was here that Floyd Bevens pitched American Legion Junior baseball, and when the Yankee hurler lost not only a no-hitter ' but the game aa well to the Brooklyn Dodgers on Lavaget to's ninth Inning doable, the town collapsed. "It broke mj heart" said Pete DeGuire who runs the jun ior Legion team. "It really hit me. I can't think of anything else and neither can anyone. Bat we're proud just the same and we're going to have a celebra Uon for him." Lavagetto's Kap uieis Bevens9 Wo-C3it Dream as BrooEilyinis wiini in . 4' I rim V fir "-yji" r'-. EBBETTS FIELD. Brooklyn. Oct Bruce Edwards Is shown scoring easily after Peewee Reese's single to center field In the second Inning of the third world series game against the New York Yankees. Yank receiver Sherman Loller awaits the threw from Centerflelder Joe DIMaggio as Umpire Ed Remmell looks on. The Dodgers won the tilt 9-8. (AP Wlrephoto ' to The Statesman.) Lynam, Hayamaki in Jacket Go Fireworks are promised an Tuesday's armory mat card with announcement by Promoter El ton Owen that the mala event will comprise a Judo Jacket match between bitter rivals Joe Lynam and that oriental mat ace, Sugl Hayamaki. Tuesday's match grew out of last week's rough and ready brawl between the two la which plenty of 111 feeling developed. Lynam be came particularly Incensed af ter Hayamaki began utiludng Ju Jiuru tactics and responded with some punching maneuvers of his own. Hayamaki took the Notre Dame Saturday's Feature NEW YORK. Oct. 3-0rVUnrnindful of the important doings in the baseball world, college football crowds into the sports picture again tomorrow with some of the their new unliorms cuny xor me Bevos, Acorns Win Contests LOS ANGELES, Oct Portland prolonged the semi final playoff of the Pacific Coast Baseball league Governors . cup tonight defeating Los Angeles, 4 to 2, for its first win to the Angels' three and send the teams into a doubleheader Sunday. Portland hit only five times but Pitcher Roy Helser halted the Angels' bid to end the series with four straight wins with a seven hit mound performance and a two-run homer in the fifth that actually won the game. Cepterfielder Vince DiMaggio drove in five runs with four hits. two of them homers, as Oakland whipped the San Francisco Seals, 8 to 4, to take a leaa oi mree games to one tonight in their playoff series. Lot Angeles 002 000 000 J 7 1 Portland 001 020 01 1 Lynn. flming () and Sarnl. GilUi pla (6); Helser and Silvers. San Francisco 000 000 1214 S Oakland 100 131 11 S 10 l Melton. Rosso (7) and Gladd; speer and JUlmondl. Indians Seek Jimmy Dykes CHICAGO, Oct. 3 -JPh Arch Ward, sports editor of the Chicago Tribune in a story from Brook lyn tonight said Jimmy Dykes, manager of the Hollywood Stars, "is flying to New York to confer with Parry Grabiner and Bill Veeck, Cleveland Indians bosses, regarding a job as 1948 pilot" OSC May Get New Pavilion CORVALLIS, Oct. 3 -(-Oregon State college may have its new basketball pavilion in time for the 1948-49 season, President A. L. Strand advised students at a general convocation this week. Strand said plans call for an ap proximate seating capacity of at least 10,000. SAINTS GERVAIS TIE ST. PAUL Gervais scored a touchdown in the first period and St Paul one in the second quar ter as the two high school elevens battled to a 6-6 tie here Friday night y Hi 1 . . ' SWiTV-Brooklyn Dodger Catcher bout two falls to one but Ly nam Uys $204 on the line that no una can top him la a Jacket so. Dave Reynolds, a cousin of the Immortal Jack Reynolds and a definite hit hereabouts since hie- recent arrival, will tackle Newcomer Al Williams in the semi-final a 30 minute or two-out-of-three fall tiff. The two one-fall prelims pit Tommy Marti ndale against Tex .Hager and Whitey Whittier op posite Jack O'Reilly. Hager re turns to local action following a lay-off beea use of an Injury. Opener nation's potential powers getting iirsx iune mis season. Notre Dame, rich In talent and experience. Invades Pittsburgh to open its bid for another unbeaten season against a Panther club that held Illinois' Big Nine cham pions to two touchdowns. Army, safely over the first hurdle, stakes its long record s gainst an intersectional invader, Colorado. Columbia, also winner in its opener, goes to Navy to meet a Middie crew that bowed to California. Two Intersectional contests in the midwest, keeping the Pacific Coast-Big Nine feud alive, find Stanford at Michigan and UCLA at Northwestern. Illinois will be at Iowa, , Ohio State at Purdue and Wisconsin at Indiana, mean while, for Big Nine engagements. One of the best games of the day promises to be the tussle be tween North Carolina and Texas in the Lone Star state. On the Pacific coast conference encounters send Oregon State to Washington and Washington State to Idaho, with Idaho the only team still unbeaten. St Mary's meets California. Football Scores COIXBGC Willamette 19. Whittier 0 Whitman 6. Lewis and Clark S Montana State 33, Colorado State 13 San Jom State IS. Hardln-Simmons 12 HIGH SCHOOL. Parrish Greys 34, West Salem Parrish Cards 34. Leslie Colds 7 Salem Bible 0. Sacred Heart Berid 26. Eugene 7 Sandy 7. Canby 0 Molalla 13. Mt. Angel 7 Verboort 23. Banks S Monroe 40. Alsea 0 Sacred Heart (Tillamook) 7. Kestuc ca 0 Nyssa 13. Ontario Taft . Newport 0 Cervais S. St. Paul Sherwood 32. Independence 7 Cottage Grove 20. Junction City IS University High 82. Elmlra 0 Amity 20. WiUamina IS Corvallis 34. Lebanon 0 Camas 26. Gresham S Hood River 34. Astoria 13 Bedmond 0. Parkrose 0 Dayton 32. Gaston 0 .HWsboro 12. McMinnvllle Pendleton S. La Grande 0 .Enterprise 13. Wallowa S Union 79, Joseph 0 Dallas 20, Estacada 0 Portland: Grant 20. Franklin 13 Washington 39, Lincoln 0 Jefferson 13. Benson S Commerce 24, Roosevelt 19 SANDY VICTORIOUS CANBY Sandy scored a first quarter touchdown here today and went on to defeat the Canby Cougars 7 to 0 in a Willamette Valley league game. Robinson made the score from one yard out and Lundbum converted. Dance Tonighl! Silverlon Armory Woodry's 14-Pieee Orchestra Salem Ace Comes Than Any Hurler By Gayle Talbot EBBETS FIELD. Brooklyn. Oct 3-PKFloyd mill) Bevens of the New York Yankees was two strikes away from a no-hit came and. haseball Immortality trxtav whm Brooklyn piochnitter, lashed a vicious double off the right field wall , at 'FhKptte tiA t Irhrwlr ' arrinca turn nma anl 4ta 4K- DWIm Dodgers a thrilling 3-2 victory In In probably tne mo6t dramatic . finish In the, 44-year history of the classic, Lavagetto, hitting for Eddie, Stanky, swung at Bevens' first pitch : and missed. On the second he took a -full cut- and whaled the ball almost on a line to ' right as the crowd of 34,443 sent up a ' full-throated bellow. Tommy H enrich, Yank rightfield- er, made a desperate leap Into the air, but the pellet thudded against the boards several feet from his glove. For eight and two-third innings. Bevens, a 29-year-old righthand er from Salem, Ore., had throttled the Dodgers. .Until he made his last fateful pitch he faced' the prospect of being the first pitcher ever to hurl a no-hitter in a se ries game. As it was, he tied two other Gingers, Claude Passes u and Ed Reulbach. both of the Chicago Cubs, In heaving a one-hitter. What made the defeat even more bitter for Bevens was .the fact that he put both the tying and winning runs on base with free passes. In all,. he issued a record-breaking total of 10 walks during the game, and the last two finally ruined him. ' For the second straight came. Hugh Casey, portly Dodger relief pitcher, gained credit for the vic tor? which deadlocked the play off at two wins each. He threw exactly one pitch, with the bases full or Yankees and-one out in the ninth Inning. Henrich whacked it back at him, and Casey tossed to Catcher Bruce Edwards to start double play. Bevens, after watching Lava getto'S blast hit the wall, turned dejectedly and trudged off the field, a forlorn figure. He owned the distinction of having pitched more hltless Innings than any man ever before in a world series, but that was small recompense for the bauble which escaped his grasp. Red Ruffing of the Yanks had a no-niner "going xor eeveny and two-thirds frames against the Cardinals In the first gam of the '42 series before the Cards scalped him. i It wasn't entirely Bevens fault that the winning run crossed onv Lavagetto's larrup. Miksis was' on Peter Reiser, for whom the young Hearlbreaker New Terk (AL) t Brooklyn. (NX) BOA B H O A StlrawsJI 4 1 t I'StaakyJ let 3 arteh,! S 1 t S Lavas- 1 1 O Berra.e 4 l!Besc,s ,4934 DIMagea t 9 t keklason,! 911 McOouU 4 11 Walkers I 9 9 lohasaaj 4 13 I HerkJ 4 UadeUJ S t 3 9 Kd wards, 4 Rixxat,s 4 11 trarUlea 3 Bevcas.a 19 9 1 Gtefriddet 9 Iergema4 t Taylor. 9 Gregg.p 1 Vaasa9 9 Behrsaa 9 casey . Slelserl Mlksli 9 9 9 9 9 9 Totals 33 9 24 1 ' Totals 24 1 27 14 a Walked far Gregg la fta. t Ran fee FarUla tat Sth. I Walked for Casey ia 9th. SUa fee Reiser la 9th. Dewfcled fee Staaky tat 9th. New Terk AL) 199 199 III Breoklya (NL 904 919 9924 Errors Reese Edwards. Berra, Jergtasea. Raaa hatted la DIMatlto, Llodell, Reese, Lavagette s. Two hase hits Llatell, Lavagette. Three hase hits Jahaioa. Stolen bases atizmta, Reese, Gtofridde, Sacrifices Staaky, Beve as. Doable plays Reese, Staaky aad Rebbuea; Gregg, Reese sad Res- la so a; Casey, Edwards aad neaiasoa. Earaed raas New York (AL) 1; Breoklya (NL) 3. Left oa bases New York I AL) 9: Brooklyn (NL) s. Bases a kaUs off Taylor 1 (DIMaggio); off Greet 3 (DIMaggta. Lladell. Stira- welss); off Beveas 14 tstaaay g, walk- tr, Jorgtasea 2, Grrt g, Vsaghaa, rarli lo. Reiser). Strikeouts .by Grerg (SUrawelas 2, Beartca, McQalaa, Bev eas); ky Beveas S (Edwarda 3. Gregg, Roblasoa). Pttchlag sasaaury: Taylor, 1 raa. a has la 9 laaksgs (aoao oat ba 1st). Gregg, 1 raa, 4 hits, tat 1 laalags. Behrsoaa, 9 tana, hits, la 1 laa lags. Casey, 9 raaa, 9 hits ,1a H laalags. Wild aluh Beveas. Wlaaiac attch- er Casey. Atteadaace 33,443 paid. iias os game: tM. complete). Ford Solos and Sorvico For . v More) Than Thirty Yeara , VALLEY 373 Center Val-E Mlrath, 3- cam Closer to Feat in Series History Harrr ff?nnkil Tat7nfftr v.t.ri the fourth game of the world series. : Valiant fry BILL BEVENS Robber 1 , .4 n COOKIE LAVAGETTO by virtue of some Yankee strategy1 Inftelder was running, had beet passed intentionally after Glon- friddo had stolen second on thJ 3-1 count At that GionfriddVs dash came very near giving the Yankee) pitcher his no-hitter right therev Yogi Be rr's peg to Phil RixzuUf was true, a foot or two above the bag, and; the Yank- shortstot slapped the ball on the flying lit- tie Dodger as he slid in. If Urn- pire Babe PinelU had called th ' play the other way the Yanki' would have been leadings thres games to one tonight and Beveru wouldn't have -been a broken hearted hurler. - Bevens' predilection for lssuinj passes gave the Dodgers theu first run in the fifth. Johnny Jon-, menrup In that chapter, drew! gifts and moved around a notchf on a sacrifice bunt by Eddie Stsn-I ky. Jorgenaen then scored easily as Reese rapped to Rizzuto at abort and Gregg was thrown ouf at third. But that was the best the Flat- bushers could manage up to tha nair-raising ximsn. School Teams Fight to Tie Salem Academy and Sacred) Heart football clubs fought to a 0-0 deadlock In a fumble-fillef contest on the Sacred Heart field here yesterday. The final gun) ended a Salem Academy drive, drive which carried from the S Heart 40 to the 18. ( j PLAY l-f TIE ! WALLA WALLA, Oct S -CP) With both teams scoring in the) second quarter, the Whitman col- icge Missionaries ana uie uw and Clark Pioneers battled to a 6 to 6 football deadlock here to night in a northwest. conference) game. WE HAYE A CREW OF CAR TROUBLE OETtCtpRS - AND A CREW OF EFFICIENT MECHANICS in Ifa all a matter of aound tradninc and constant ex perience this, comWnocl with tho most modern equipment aastxrea you l complata atialacSon, Wne.n "Our Boyatecklo tha "chock up" T ear nooda, you're aettino; "spo daliat', attention. Salanx. Orogoa MOTOR CO. i