MaSoeiraall Title Alffteir Ainraazomig Pancho iKeats Ted Schroeder - Thrilling lt St t . End at Record 18-16 BID etoacEs TheyTl Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo Br Carle Talbat FOREST HILLSN. Y Sept. 5-M-ADOrenUy hopelessly beaten after losinf the. longest set ever played in an American champion ship tennis final, Pancho Gonzales ' of Los Angeles made an amazing nmharc today to. defeat Ted Schroeder In five thrilling sets and retain his title. Scarcely one bf the 13.000 in the stadium could have given Pancho a ghost of a chance after he drop- h . rarcantuan opening 'set 15-18 and submitted weakly in the second. 2-1. But from somewhere h. hi Mexican-American shelled tin the runs hat enabled him to overcome his fellow Davis Cup ace, e-1, -2. -4. In the final three sees mnA imd the crowd home bab bling. It was a genuinenhriller-dlller, as it had promised to be. Enough drama was parked into the first set alone to do a half-dozen finals. Pancho's almost unbelievable rally ramp near beine an anti-climax after that one. It required an hour and 18 min utes to play. There was not a service break until Schroeder fin 'ellr busted Pancho in the 33rd game. The points in the gigantic affair were 104 for S hroerter. mi tnr Oonzales. Thirteen thousand hearts pounded and spluttered right tmjthe final point. ; Th longest previous set in championship final . played in 1930, and saw Johnny Doeg win it from Frank Shields. 16-14. That one. too, was a contest between two players with greet serves that almost Hefied breaking. ' Mrs. Margaret Osborne Dupont, 11 -year-old Wilmington. Del., ma- tron. became a two-time women's champion by roundly out watting Doris Hart of Jacksonville, Fla., cK4. 8-1, in a final that consumed only 43 minutes. Miss Hart, 23 and possessed of an exciting set of strokes when .she Is "right," didn't have it today and went down without much of a struggle after leading 2-0 and 4-3 In the initial set. from there on she was too erratic, especially from her backhand, to give the champ Ion any bad moments. Officials Meet Due Tonight The first meeting; ef the Salem Football Officials association for ltll has been called far tonight. 7:Xt o'clock, at the eh amber at eemmeree. President Harold Haas, asks that all who expect to officiate t football games this season b present ta help act up the asMctattan'a nragram for tha MmpslfB. An election of officers for 1949 also la ta be heM. aeordtng to Hawk. Tha meeting will be aa brief aa possible. NO X SAW HIM WS JOS BORAX-NO! rtfOE BIL6E? WHY WOULD HE SEND ME At WWW T dWC r MMMMMMtJOE DON'T KNOW ANi J05EPH1N!E-HMM (f he knows aooo GUVS NAMED JDEims ORlVlNS HIM NUTS RSURiNQ WHICH JOE 15 A GOCQ TIME THE GUVS WITH TEiCX NAMES ALWAYS S6H TUB FULL HANDLE- BUT NOT A GUV NAMED A HE BET ON A HOKSS NAviED DDE LAST WEEK THAT SOT LOST 4 THE BACK STCETCH IF JDEW4S ASWN3 F&RA HAME, ADDRESS AND PHONE NUMBER- lift ttn. kim rfuc nmn a til, im, uu nMtii K.iutvr yffyjtf, IRRITATION NO. 2,347... THANX TO JIM MAYOCK., 274- GEORGE. AVEV Odom Dies, Records Set as Races Finish ROCKY WANTS MILLS- light ; heavyweight ranks today, wrt? the result he issued a chal lenge to Freddy Mills, the Briton who holds the title in that weight class.' "After I beat i Fusari 111 take on anybody Rocky said. "I want Mills. I can come in at 162 or 163 and take him." Logger Snares Salmon Jackpot ASTORIA. Sept 8 -iff)- John C. Hoikka, a young Rosburg, Wash., logger who counts on extra earnings from fishing derbies, ticked up $1,500 In prizes today or a 46 -pound, ten-ounce Chinook salmon taken in the Columbia river. It gavL him a $1,700 total for a few days -of sport. Hoikka collected $1,000 from the annual Astoria contest and $500 from tha Chinook, Wash., darby. He caught the big salmon Friday and already had picked up $200 In daily prizes. Derby officials estimate there were 5,000 boats on the lower Co lumbia for tha Labor Day final BROWNS WIN OPENER BUFFALO, N. Y.. Sept S -Jft-Th champion Cleveland Browns came roaring from behind with 11 points in the last quarter today to tie tha Buffalo Bills, 26-28. in the local All-America Conference football season opener before 31,- 839 in Civic stadium. 'DOirGfJts VICTOR SPRINGFIELD, Mo.Sept B-fF) Dava Douglas, of Newark, Del, fired a sizzling 33-33 6, seven under par, today to win tha $3,000 Ozard open golf tournament with a 34-hole total of 203. Douglas pocketed $1,000 first Jlaee' money in beating out Jim errier. San Francisco, the leader after 36 holes, by three strokes.. t i'i By James J. Strebig i CLEVELAND, Sept. 5-tP)-The National Air Races ended today in flaming death for distance Flyer Bill! Odom during" a -wild dash won by Cook Cleland at a record 397 miles an h$ur. It was CJeland's second victory and second record in tha Thom pson trophy, $40,000 premier event of closed course competition. He won a total of $19,100 including lap prizes, j Save for the tragedy back of the stands and out of sight of the 72,000 paying spectators, the close of the three; day program was a glory filled afternoon. Pilots smashed speed marks with every drop of the checkered flag. Bill Brennani of Oshkosh, Wis., set a new midget plane mark in the Goodyear trophy race with 177.3 mph. He won $7,000 first prize money ; in "Buster," a plane built by his boas, Steve Wittman of Oshkosh. Wittman set records with it a dozen years ago. The old Goodyear mark of 169 mph was set a year ago by H. R. Salmon of Van Nuys, Calif., who finished fifth today. j --The next mark to fall was in the Allison Jet trophy dash from Indianapolis, Ind when Lt Walter C. Raw of San Bernardino, Calif., flashed over the 259 mile course at 594 Jt mil an hour. The old mark was 493 set in 1947. . Then a pair of air force fighters North American F-88 Sabres flew the fastest closed course event in history. Capt Bruce Cunningham J?L. Hammond, Ind., assigned to Andrews air base, Md., came in first; with an Average speed of 5864 miles an hour. Race officials said: it probably will not be recognized because Cunningham cut a pylon in straaightening out his plana as portions of the tail ; surface tore off. He finished tha race and then made an emergency landing. Tha Thompson race tragedy that Bill Odom was only the second in the four flown since the war des pite the tremendous Jump in speeds since the 1930's. (Further details on Odom death will be found on page one). Today'$m Etchers TODAYS PITCHERS Std Hd 2 p National j league Philadelphia at New York (2) Roberts (14 12) and Borowy (12-9) vs Jones (11-10) and Kennedy (11-10). Boston at Brooklyn (night) Voiselle (6-J) vs Newcombe (14 6). Cincinnati at Pittsburgh (night) Fox (5-14) vs Walsh (1-2) (only; games scheduled.) American league No games scheduled, i ' ; Look Br and Learn A. a Gordo Cantrell Again Cracks Marks DETROIT, Sept. S-O-WUd Bill Cantrell smashed a few mora speedboat records with My Swee tie today to win the silver cup trophy with virtually no compe tition. Cantrell drove the Horace E. SUMMIT, N. J., Sept. 3-(JP- Dodfje boat at an average speed of Conveniently ignoring i the mid- 81.974 miles an, hour in the second dleweight division, Rocky Grazia- I and final heat of the race. no let his mind wander to the I Of the eight boats that started I today's 45-mile heat, only three were running at finish. 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News; e Music That Endures: S:45 Eve niag Medttstinne: ISM Excursions is Science: 18.15 Serenade; 10:4S News; UM Sign OxL r i ' ; i Ine Nations lop Lomics m I . . iopt Home nnrgpapcr j I 'l TlliilliiiiF" "ILnuMfridiu"- - iHiiP1 i i 3ZTc STTnot VfSk JtSTVn m5jS) L WHEN 4ALL) rVJORffy ABOUT JIMMY me ME ) SQUtr-QjM) ?ncZ J tff attOTtPg ''M ' eJF E T I togk VllSJMCWl iMEArvVVWILE; AT THE I fuEXlJO AMA, WC'S EASV BOV -THGV TSih?2 2X$L STATDWDeT' BOOftTXA5TlrsO fcUCJf) JTWeTtUoT IS rLY75 ffeg LSrSAt IITJ KT DICt TRACT i " I " nTWAKKtXJFO ) , " J TA.KE TME MONEY, 100-) fnOMESX r J(hE GOT WS POOR FEET 9UW, &JlV 1 viSJ THE THANKS Ml?. ) BUT I A 100 EaRWEO IT THE SlWASOMLY HE 0OMT W&nTMO MOMCY-tOU KW Vm RotSEWTr (Ssisy HARD WY-KDO RISKED HELPtH I ULLTUE WAY MES WAG6IH HtS 7 SAVED MY SHOW -YOU'VE EAfiNEDrT?? a)fjL0rl'T TAKE J vbuR UF AMlw57ECO-HE TAIL,THATHK ttAO HECOOLD HEIPU THIS REWARD -AND THE YPsXlhl NO MONEY FOR f THEItWE NE FOLKS yTHO MELPE3 ' yyjmi jusTYELUNA rr vrBm. M2!E2 I eW-.i a Jri'- I lv- raKfiaVMII1 VU V i? Kk Tit 1 I i- Vtmi H RlSafT. .1 uaeJ234r.S 1 l jt SI t W V ffTO IWMJfii. I I UULL AJinib aJJIM,t - ,i i ill j i w i i ii in nwrmt-inii n ie ffl'M AWPUU.V SOy A WEU. 6UPLV FAV KM. Jl I WHY, VOU, BUH6UH& iPtOTlTMl,.,, . i I ANP VtXI. Wm6MT-YD0'ir 1 II THAT JUNIORMtS- ) I THE PAMA6B MfiK I I PAMAS MES P0N6 WtL RUN' INTO MlLLIONSJj I f THE RLOCKHCAP WHO WAP 1 S ' yiM M T7A- 4 1 v. --re ri.wV'V- I Jl I V C- h W. II r-T X-9 II I : L V a 1 .1 II J fl l f l-a II II I Lt"ll U v CJf I I I af - " t rr ry Tim ISF.AXO-l II III III II U II H TL- IsVyrsM. at 1 lit" L1 CK. J-J " -4 CCEET MOUST ifF' I : ? 1 TX HERE'S MY PROBLEM, H0NSY..J I ItjEAMNOI WAS A CAR-440P AT A atMMN I THT VwMI HBR FIRST aSTlMrj WITH AUXN 1 K-4l UNTIL RECENTLY, I WAD A CUBNT I I RECTAURAMT-. I I STONST, THB ONLY COM O0 WZU.'TO-CO mSa4TSw1 , I V SrK IM TEXAS A I I V SW-aT . . miA I ai . - ii nl js S p I la f ' I j 1 j l i ve votfi git rr 0. I J 1 l - I A L gs&sfom ssfy fwrn-rrf f 7. Li "" BAEr COOlT , , 'i-r--v;a ' :. . ; i-.--r -t " . - -1 . . ; - p. ."- f i- ..-! . . : ' I v. f - . ; I- - .-. ... i i . V - ) i ... , I t