fBit Him Here and You've Got Him e Hurls 7T - Will to t' '4: fi 1 !! ' n r ,. ni,.-,, S tj Ted MUler, center, fficer 1b the Four Corners Rod & Gun targets on the dab's new rifle ranee which is to be dedicated at Let MatUcji, left, and Carl Raetz, right "Open House" Is to be in locatea ioar miles east of on o 13-13 Battle Initiates Turf By TOM YATES Statesman Sportswriter The North Salem Vikings last night inaugurated the new high school football stadium by fighting the -Jefferson Democrats of the Portland Interscholastic League to a 13-13 standoff. The scrappy Viks of Coach Al Gray gave an opening night turnout of 1,500 fans more Jeff. Vile. 214 159 Yardt gained rushiaf ' Yards sained passing Paisei attempted -- Passes completed . Passes had intercepted First downs rumbles . Ball lost on fumbles Yards .penalized . 31 . 11 , 4 1 11 . a 3 23 . than their money's worth as they displayed an explosive running at tack and a heads up defense that more. than once turned the same in the local's favor.' '. The .Jells, highly regarded by pre-season ratings, twice had to come from, behind as alert Salem defenders set up both Viking scores with fumble recoveries. , The Portlanders bobbled the ball six times in all, losing on three occasions. ' .The Vikings grabbed a six to nothing lead before the game was four . minutes old. little Jimmy Norval scooting Xi yards around his own right end for the score. The opportunity lor the tally pre sented itself when Bob , Jacobs fumbled Bob Tom's punt on the Demo 10 and End Lee .Weaver lU A uui 9 uuui via uiv ft 77 7D pounced on the loose oval for theiphotoed out by the one next to him Wals After two tries at the vis-1 - itor's line Norval was sent around end with big Don Pigsley leading , the way and he went into the end ; zone standing up. Fenton Locken ; our's conversion try . skidded off r to the right and the Vifcx led 6-0 with. 8:27 left in the opening pe riod. . The Jeffersons struck with sur prising speed midway .through the second quarter after a punt by Tom had been downed on the Salem 38. On . the first play Quarterback Chuck Jacques, fak ing nicely, drifted around his own left end and spurted down the sideline to paydirt. Nate Jones then split the uprights tb put Coach Tom DeSylvia's eleven on top 7-6. Thats the way the score board read at the halftime rest. The Norths once again took the lead early in the second half when the third'period kickoff was fumbled by Jefferson's Ken Stodd and big Jim Gordon, a standout all night for the Grays, fell on the ball on the Demo 35. Two plays ' later Norvall, behind Gor don's blocking skipped 30 yards to the enemy one from where "Don Kronser bulled over on one try. This time Lockenour was true with his boot and the board read 13 to 7 for Salem with 9:36 left in the third chapter. The Metropolitan squad scored the tying tally early in the final canto on the end of the only successful sustained drive by either club, going 83 yards in 17 plays. They racked up six first downs enroute. Jacques went the - final three yards on a sneak. This time Jones' boot drifted too far to the right and the 13-13 score score stood with 9.Z7 left in. the Same. . Jefferson twice more attempted to get a threat going but Gor don stopped "one drive . on the N'orth 17 with a fumble recovery. -nd late in the game Pigsley de flected a Jacques pass into the liands of Weaver to give the Viks the ball at midfield with 39 sec onds left. Backstrand came within a hair of hitting the flying Nor val with ; a long pass, but four plays resulted in no gain and the visitors took over for one Py that also proved to be an 'almost' long pass TD that was just a little too long. Gray substituted on a very lim ited basis, with most of the start ers going both ways. Gordon, Pi?s ley and Weaver were outstanding on defense as well , as blocking effectively. - - - Jefferson 1 8-13 North Salem 6 7 013 Scoring: Jefferson Touchdowns: Jaeoues (2): Conversion;. Jones. North Salem Touchdowns: Norval, Kronser; Conversion: Lockenour. Officials: Bill Beard, referee: George Slrnlo. head linesman; John Cvavatj, umpire. "WW Four Corners. (See story next page.) - ! 1 15 Wifila Sunday sorties: -I -. Quite a week it was at Lone Oak track. The populace, complain ing over the high cost of everything, nonetheless established new bet ting marks each day of the meet was John Steelhammer who had dollar daily double, for John let it be known that he was quite friendly with jockeys, boss owners and the gee-gees themselves. But Steelhammer wasn't the one, un less he disguised himself as a gal when he went to the pay wicket. Curt Ferguson had a big day early in the week. A Uniformed soldier approached him . with a sincere, "I know this No. 2 horse in this : race, friend, and if you'll give me a buck to go along with the only one I have, I'll bet him and split it with you." Generous Curt obliged, gave the GI the buck and then watched No. I come fly- ling in to pay $27.70 for the win. out kj. me sokuer Boy wasn't to be found at the appointed rendez vous. I guess my $13.85 and the soldier are somewhere in Fort Lewis by now," concludes a much wiser- Mr, Ferguson5 rThen there was the day the boss "Bob in the form sheets and went off at 13-1. When the horse romped htome first, paying $28.80 for the win, we noted a rather gleeful Bill Bevens bouncing toward the pay window. "What made you pick that lown?" we asked of Bev. "The real Bob Feller beat me once in Cleveland, 2-1. grinned the former Yankees flinger. "and 1 figured this whs a good time for him to pay off for it" . . . Had there been a naz named Cookie Lavagetto on the card, Bevens would have brought alon$ his shotgun . . . Yep, it was quite a week, one in which we again learned i " ,tvaa. wm fivauu inat Cnruiurl r0CtlMt Aim iMttrifi ; convinced that even if we bet on tour Corners Uent$ Display Their Range The results of seven years of planning and building will ) be n display, this afleraeoa ant beyand Fear Corners, -where She energetic gents of that community have erected their! rifle range. The layout consists of IVA acres of land perfectly salted for a range, roofed accommodations for' 4 shooters, mechanisms to operate moving targets and plenty af parking space. j The many hunters who have entered the Four Cornel's Buck Derby in the last seven years have contributed the money,; via entry fees, (uonunuea Giants Lose To Chicago LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (Special to The Statesman) The Chicago Bears blanked the New York Giants, 7-0, -before 20,000 rain drenched foootball fans Saturday night in a titanic defensive strug gle between the two National Football League clubs in an ex hibition game. Goal-line stands were made by both teams, the Giants twice stop ping the Bears inside the five yard line, once on the one-foot marker and again on the three yard stripe. In turn, the Giants were stopped in the fourth quar ter on the seven-yard line and Redskins Nip Pack 33 to 31 WINSTON-SALEM. N. C. 11 Little Eddie Le Baron sneaked six short but long inches on the last play of the game to fire the Wash ington Redskins to a 33-31 victory -over the Green Bay Packers in a National Professional Football League exhibition game here Sat urday night A crowd of 13,000 braved threat ening weather to witness the con test . The Packers, riding on the pitch ing arm of Tobin Rote and the run ning of Howie Ferguson, rolled to a 21-12 lead by the end of the third period and midway of the fourth ! period ft was 31-19. i Then the Redskins came to life. With Le Baron throwing and Billy Cox. former Duke star catching. the Redskins moved to two touch downs it the final minutes of play. Cox caught three straight passes from Le Baron for ' a total of 48 yards and a touchdown and then, with only seconds remaining on the clock, he hauled in another for 11 to reach the six-inch line. l ' v f f i : - ' f Cluh ai be looks over one of 2:3b n.m. todav. With Miller the kre held on the 17' 4 acre range today. "7 J8&29DJ ... Everyone, in town believe! it the lone ticket for that thousand- CLAY HOPPER , 'Waives barking again. ' " Feller ran. He looked like a stiff Ia rha nmna tfoo Wcsi I rtAtv f s uiiv a rim t w a, uvw a merry-go-round nag. he'd be ... r j ' I I- on next page) Exhibition Bears, 7f0 lost their chance to tie Chicago. The Bears scored in the sec ond quarter. Tom Landry, defen sive wizard of the Giants, punted from his own 26 but the kick was blocked by Ed Meadows, defen sive end of the Bears, and was picked up by Joe Forturnato, left linebacker, who ran it 15 yards to the 11. On the first play, Bob Watkins, the Bears rookiij half back from Ohio State, went off left tackle for the touchdown, with 13:33 gone in the period. George Blanda, Bear quarter back, kicked the extra poiAt His toe wasd't so accurate at! other times as he missed two 33-yard field goal attempts, j The Giants Jiad their big chance in the fourth period when they pushed to the' "7. Me Trip lett, rookie fullback, led the at tack with 83 yards gained! on 13 carries, The opportunity as set up when Landry punted 57 yards while standing in the end zone. On the first Chicago- play, Ed Brown fumbled and Roosevelt Grier recovered on ' the Bear 28. ' Triplett carried for 11 yards in two tries and Frank GifforH made five. A pass rom Chuck Conerly to Bob Scbnelker was caught bv the big end in the end zd-ne but he dronped it when he fell to the ground. j . Gifford manaeed to make three more . yards off tacVle put the Giants then lost on downs. Standouts for the Giints in eluded Alex Webster earlier in the game. On defense the stirs were Gner, Rex ;Bon. Ray Kmuse, Ray Collins, Dicfr Nolan and Landry. , i j Ccuerly went all the i war at quarterb-ck as Don HeinHch o a re of the. nervous hives nd could hardlv ooen his eyes. Bob by Clatterbuck was jnursin? ro?sed ribs. Others out with in juries were Kvl Rote. Jim Dun can, Rarnev Poole, and Bill Ann tin. Austin played onH a few minutes because of a bad knee. Tribe Nips Bpsox Chisox Nudge Yankees, 9-8 Crucial Errors Put New York Behind! 15 wyyf BB Roundup rs306pps 10 By MURRAY ROSE . THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Cleveland ' Indians stretched their American League lead to ltt games over . New. York Saturday by rallying to beat the Boston Red Sox 10-7 as the Yanks dropped a pressure-packed 10th inning thrill er .to Chicago s scrapping, . White Sox.-9-a. . .- '. . v Errors at crucial moments de termined both games and might turn out to be the vital factor in the torrid pennant, race. A little of the heat was taken off the Indians and piled on the Yanks for Sun day's vital Cleveland-New York doubleheader at Yankee Stadium.1 Chicago, winning on a 2-out er ror by first baseman Eddie. Robin son, kept in the running only 34 games behind the flying Indians, who captured their fifth straight Boston Far Back The defeat just about ruined Boston's chances, dropping the Red Sox 6 games off the pace. The Yanks had a 4-game winning streak snapped. - Trailing 7-4 going into the sev enth, the Indians battered Boston's defenses for five runs to win the nerve - tingling, see - saw contest. Ralph Kiner's two-run homer off reliefer Ellis Kinder, his second in two days, made it 7-6. When Kinder walked Gene Wood ling and Dale Mitchell, he was re placed by Tom Hurd. Pinch-hitter Bob Lemon singled to right field and when the ball got past Jackie Jensen, two runs rolled in , and Lemon reached third. Al Smith, who smashed five sin i (Continued . on next page.) Shaw Passes For Colt Win CHICAGO on The Baltimore Colts scored in every quarter Sat urday night to beat the Chicago Cardinals 24-14 in a National Foot ball League. exhibition game. The Colts moved to a 14-0 half- time lend before rookie halfback L. G. duPre of Baylor flashed 84 yards for. a touchdown in the open ing minutes of the second half to bury Chicago's hopes. Baltimore scored Its first touch down orf a fake field goal attempt with George Shaw tossing a' 9 yard touchdown pass to Gino Marchetu. Bert Rechichar kicked the first of three extra points. The Colts pulled out of their half- time lead when Lloyd. Couteryahn took a 20 yard pass from Shaw. The Cardinals broke into the scoring column midway in the fourth quarter when fullback Mai Hammack capped a 40-yard drive with a 14-yard run through center for a touchdown. Sam SumroeraQ converted making the score 21-7. Rechichar kicked a 24-yard field goal to put the Colts out of reach before the Cardinals scored their final touchdown on a 19-yard pass from Ogden Compton to Jim Carr. Lions Stomp Browns, 19-3 CLEVELAND Ifl - .The Detroit Lions handed the champion Cleve land Browns their third straight exhibition defeat Saturday night as quarterback Bobby Layne en gineered a 19-3 victory. The Browns, who beat the Lions 56-10 in the National Football League title game last December, were unable to get a sustained of fense under way, even with veter an quarterback Otto Graham back in the lineup. After . Lou Groza had put the Browns ahead with a 10-yard field goal early in the second quarter, the Lions came back with, a 73 yard drive, scoring on a SO yard pass play from Layne to Dome Dibble. Doak Walker converted, and later in the same period kicked an 11-yard field goaL The Lions added 9 more points in the final period on a touchdown by Bob Hoernschemeyer on a one yard plunge, and a 34-yard field goal by Jim Martin. . George Ratterman started the game at quarterback for Cleve land, and directed a ground attack that carried 43 yards before stall ing. When the Lions took the lead in the second, period. Coach Paul Brown sent in Graham, who could not get the Browns rolling. Gra ham, who had announced his re tirement after quarterbacking the Browns for nine years, rejoined the team a week ago and had only a few workouts before his opening appearance Saturday night. It was the fourth defeat in five games for the Browns. - Dnrtnr PrpHirl Ralie uocior rrefiicis. naoe Will Play Again Soon 17 GALVESTON. Tex. tf Babe Didrickson Zaharias is expected to be playing golf again before I long, an authority at John Sealyj Hospital said Saturday. The spokesman, a medical man who asked that his name not be used, said the famed woman ath lete is expected to be dismissed from the hospital early next week. She has 'been under treatment for a second cancer. Statesman, Salem, Or., Sunday, Sept. 11, 1955 (Sec. 4 1 Sun Boy Snares Au Revoir 'Cap :As Races Close . Stanley McDowell booted home Sun Boy for his third win of the day to capture the Au Revoir; Handicap Saturday at the Lone Oak Track in the last day of horse racing at the Oregon bute Fair. Sun Boy chased B'ar Queen until (he head of the stretch, then P1 wannnnnXinjn PACIFIC COAST LEACVB ' ' WLPct . WLPct. Seattle 94 76 .553 Portland 84 M .494 & Diego 7 79 .533' Sn Fran 74 91 .4S HoUywd 90 SO A 9 Oakland 77 93.453 LosAnr 90 80.529 Sarrr. Saturday's results: At Portland t. Oakland a; at Seattle 3. Los Angeles 1: at Hollywood 1. San Diego S; at San Francisco 12, Sacramento 10. AMERICAN LEAGUE . . W L Pet. W L Pet. Cleveland 87 54 .817 Detroit - 7170.504 N'w York 85 55 .607 Kn. City 58 82 .414 Chicago . 83 57 .593 Wshgtn 49 88 J58 Boston 80 59 .378 Baltimr - 44 93 .324 Saturday's results: At Washington f. Kansas City 8; at Baltimore 5. De troit 3: at New York 8. Chicago 8; at Boston 7, Cleveland 10. - i NATIONAL LEAGl'S . " - W L Pet. W L Pet. Brooklyn 93 47 .664 Cinclnn- 70 75.483 Milwauk 78 64 .549 Chicago 68 7 .47 N'w York 73 S8 .518 St. Lou 59 SI .421 Philadel 72 71 303 Pitsbgh 55 83 .390 Saturday s results: At CincinnaU 4. New York 3: a Chicago 3. Brook lyn 3 (tie. rain): at St. Louis 4. Philadelphia a: a jairwauK.ee u. Pittsburgh Sv Suds Clinch PCL Pennant SEATTLE Uft Seattle clinched the Pacific Coast League pennant IfoL, 1951, Saturday night with a tignt, 3-1. - oaseDau win over me Los Angeles Angels. Monty -" BasgaH started , the game a scoring in Uie. second in ning. - He . doubled for Seattle, moved to third on a wild pitch and came .home on a single by Leo Righetti. - .' The Rainiers added two more in the fourth. Vera Stephens doubled to deep left and went to third on Art Schult's single. Gene Verble came in to run for Stephens and BasgaH walked to load the sacks. Righetti got his second single, scoring Verble. and Schult In the other PCL games Satur day, Oakland shutout Portland, 3-0; San Diego eliminated Holly wood, from the pennant race, 8-1, and San Francisco won a hitting spree from Sacramento, 12-10. Saa Diego JOO 001 302 S 15 0 000 000 001-4 4 3 Aylward; Bowman, Hollywood McUsh and King 3. Wade (8). coreii (7 O'Donaen (9) and Hall. Sacramento 031 000 01510 14 1 San Francisco 411 000 42 12 11 2 Osenbaugh. -JoneT (1). Harrist (71 and McKeagaa; Fracchia, Ponce (3), Walsh (9) nd Cheao. Los Anireles 000 000 01ft 1 1 Seattle 010 200 00 8 1 8 Hatten. Church 5. Zick (7) and Tappe. Fanning (7): Kretlow. Judson (8), Kennedy (Si and Swift. Oakland 001 000 200 3 10 0 Portland - 000 000 000 6 3 1 Borland and Neal; Adams, HaU (9) and Lundberg. .... 3 Golfers in Tie , For, Tourney Lead SCOTCH PLAINS, N.J. UH The $50,000 Cavalcade of Golf Tourna ment settled into a stubborn dog fight Saturday with three players Sam Snead. Gei.e Littler and Fred die Haas tied for the lead at the end of the third round with scores of 209. ' '.. Snead, three strokes back after the second found, shot a sizzling 66 Saturday as par 70 was bettered 15 times apparently because the field began to get the feel of Shack amaxon'a narrow fairways and tricky , greens'. ' .- i Bruins' Bradley Stars in Practice LOS ANGELES ( Doug Brad ley, starting at tailback for the first time, starred Saturday in the UCLA varsity's only full-scale scrimmage before meeting Texas AIM here next Friday night As the varsity knocked the spots out of the reserves,, Bradley con- nectcd with four passes in four for 57 yards and two touchdowns. T):A Tu Cka T)n-Anrva WlA Gerry McDougall foUowed in that order at the tailback spot At the end of the half the varsity ' had routed the reserves 42 to 0. TI-CATS SCREAM HAMILTON UB A last-half ral ly, gave the Hamilton Tiger-Cats a 23-12 victory over" the Ottawa j Rough Riders in their Big Four football game .before a crowd of only 12,491 Saturday. ' 1 JJps Lead caught up and went on to Win the featured rae of the day.' Sun Boy, who had also won the Inaugural .Handicap and placed second in the Labor Day Handi cap, ! clipped off the mile and one-sixteenth race in a time of 1:46 45, just 15 second off the track record! established by Aristo Tex in 1953. - -j McDowell's other two victories of the day came en Sail On in the fourth and Booter Prince in the sixth. j Largest Quinlela I Sun Boy paid I $4.20, $3.00 and $2.70, J i Largest quiniela of the racing meet was paid, in the third race Saturday as Canned Goods and Pigeon Pattern returned $480.60. I Bettors continued to smash rec ords in the final; day of the races. The seven-day. total reached a new j high of $794,719. Highest previous total was the $744,063 bet in 1953. Thef handle Saturday was far above last year's for the Same day, also, $151,801 to $131, 320 of 1954. Attendance Topped ! An inquiry Was called in the Au Revoir Handicap when it ap peared that Sun !Boy had crowded B'ar Queen coming into the home stretch. But theipatrol judge said there was rood. Attendance for the races this year reached 3,587, over a thou sand above the 2,494 of last year, j Two fines were announced by race f officials Saturday. John Walsh and McDowell were fined $13 each for not making agreed weights. : .-. .n?i 1 First Race One mile harness: Prer stacet Pete. 85 M. 1 3.40. 290: Sir Wool en. 4 JO. 4.60: Milglory,. .): time 3:13J; quiniela S39.10. I Second Ftace One mile harness: Captain King. 3.80. 2.90. 2.70:- Mattie Maxey. 7.40. 3.60; Chips Dalyum. 4.00; time 2:13.3: quiniela $12.60. Daily Double $10.90. . - Third Race Five furlongs: Canned Goods. 33.00. 14.40. 7.20: Pigeon Pat ter. C3.50. 8.00; Honey Bun. 2.80; time 1:01: quiniela 8489.60. j Fourth Race 1-116 miles: Sail On, 14 20, 8.90. 5.40: Sonny Grand, 11.10, 5.50; Royal Quejt, 3.00; time 1:49 J; quiniela 5118J0. j i rum Kace ' furlongs: San Si- mon.i 7.50. 3.90. 1.90: SDit Curl. 5.50. 3.10: I Gay Root 3.00: time 1:20.2; qumiela 815.00. Sixth Race 6i furlongs: Booter Prince. 7.60. 4.10, 2.60: No War. 4.80. 2.80: Fair Kathleen. 2.40; time 121; quiniela $17.60. I Seventh- Race 6i furlongs: Combsville. 13.00, 8.20. 690: Call Brand. 9.60, 8-30; Sir Harvone. 8.70; time 1:20.4: quiniela $47 90. Eighth Race 1-118 miles. "The Au Revoir Handicap": Sun Boy, 4.20. 3.00. 2.70; B'ar. Queen, 3.40. - 2.60; Freddie The Fox, 3.00; time 1:46.4; quiniela $9.20. Ninth Race 1-518 miles: Lott Heather. 4.00. 2M. .60: Thrifty. 3.20, 2.60; Pretty Choice. X10; time 2:15.4; quiniela $9.20. 1 Tenth Raeel-JH miles: Audac ious: Boy. 24.80, 14.70. 5.70: Aoia. 12.20, 3.10: Vain Floorer, 3.40; time 2:16;. quiniela 863.10. System Change Worries OSC CORVALLIS; ( Oregon State College opens its football season here next week with a game against the Brigham Young Cou gars of the Mountain States Con ference. ! - . . i The Staters' new coach. Tommy Prpthro, said his biggest problem so far in practice sessions has been teaching the players his bal anced line system with a single wing. , j i - : Last season Oregon State oper ated exclusively . with a T-forrfta-tion. j ' . ' . . Wow Save Up lo $495.00 ' " mmmmrm to. 660 North Liberty St. BTk.-a off Series As Salems Nab 4-2 Tilt; Sixth Came Assured Monday ( C. T By AL LIGHTNER i - statesman Sports Editor : The strong right arm of Mel (Tarzan) Krause. a valuable find for Uncle Hugh Luby in the late League baseball season, amounted to money in the bank last n'eht at Waters Field as the handsome husky, normally the town Sen ator's second baseman, hurled a 4 to 2 victory over the Euzene. Emeralds. ; , The important victory, badly needed by the Senators, again tied the playoff series with the Ems, at two wins for each side. - Hurls Win Mel Krause, .bove, last night - pitched a 4-2 victory over the. Engene Emeralds for the Sa lem Senators, tieing up the Northwest League playoff se ries at two games for each club. Fifth clash of the set is shted for today at two o'clotk' at Eugene. The sith game re turns to Waters Field, eight o'clock Monday nighL Trabert Trims Aussies' Hoad FOREST HILLS, N. Y. Urv- Tony Trabert. a grim court killer, changed the Davis Cup script with a stunning 6-4, 6-2, 6-1 victory over Australia's Lewis Hoad Saturday to smash into - the finals of the National . Tennis . Championships against Ken RosewaU. Rosewall, the other half of Aus tralia's triumphant Davis Cup duo. held his mystic spell over Vic Seix as . and cut down the defending champion with rifle-tike . marks manship, 6-4, 6-4, 7-5. , t So the bullnshouldered Cincinnati athlete, a hard-serving net attack er who already holds,, the French and Wimbledon ", titles.wili ''shoot for his third national crown of the year against -the 20-year-old Aus- s. . champion, . rated the sharpest backcourt sniper in amateur , ten nis. . .. ' Trabert Master Trabert, his service like a cannon-shot and his backhand an in strument of destruction cracked Hoad's big service, rated the strongest in tennis, seven times three times at love. ; The entire match took, only 52 minutes. . Jack Kramer," one-time amateur great, called it "the greatest match I've seen Trabert play" but Trabert modestly said his one-sick ed : victory was the result of a Hoad letdown after the Davis Cup matches. I ; ' Trabert was a buzz-saw of ef fectiveness in levelling his person al series with the blond-haired Aus sie at three matches each. Hoad won in four 1 sets in the re cent Davis Cup challenge round. Easy Victories j The women's division failed to produce the stirring which poured from the men's rackets. , Doris Hart, defending champion from Coral .Gables, Fla., and Pat Ward, a 26-year-old English Wight-1 man Cup player, went into the last t round with drab, one-sided tri umphs. - - I T - I """ i j t . 5 A 1,1 ,At- PRICES SLASHED' ON NEW 1955 JOHNSONS 5Vi HP Johnson Outboard 10 HP Johnson Outboard 25 HP Johnson Outboard Try 'em on the River . . . Big Trade-in Allowance SALEM BOAT HOUSE Chemekota at the River IT (All Mod.li $1 Down ond Only $49.95 Per TRADES ACCEPTED . - with Again Evened stages of the reeular Northwest The series now shifts back to Eugene for a 2 p.m. game today. A sixth game is assured for Wa ters Field on Monday flight, at eight o'clock, and the seventh and final mix. if. necessary, will be played in the city selected by the toss of a coin. In today's game at Eugene it will be Bill Dials, relief hero of the second game, up against the Emerald whiz George StortL Storti has blanked ' Salem four times this season, all efforts ac complished at night The Solons intend doing much better today, with the "big light" burning. Last night's addition to the playoffs was a dramatic sortie from .beginning to end, and one that had the Senators rooters as nervous as a bride-to-be in . the late stages of it Krause was given his four runs in the very first inning. It was up to him to then hold on the rest of the way as the pesky Ems, who licked the Salems 13 times in 21 regular season trios. tried and tried to catch op. uel himself was master of the situations in the early going. His infield, and particularly Gene -Tanselli at shortstop, pulled him over the hump-.as the sweat-dripping skirmish neared its climax. Young Leroy Han, a surprise starter for the Ems, lost his game in the first inning, as men tioned. He was frightfully wild, walking three and hitting one be fore Big Jack Steinagel came' through brilliantly in the clutch with a booming, bases-loaded triple to deep right-center. Floyd Robinson and Jack Dunn walked to start with, before Han whiffed Don Frailey. Then Tan selli also walked. Bill Shields was a -strikeout victim as the fireball righthander looked as if he might get out of the mess. Then while Tommy Agosta was batting, Robinson tried ,a theft of home. No one will ever know whether he would have made it or not, for Han's hurried pitch hit Agosta, forcing in the tally. : Then Steinagel cleaned up every one else on the sacks with his timely drive. -; Jack almost made it to the dish also, as the relay throw missed at third base. Bat a quick recovery-4 throw by Bill East bum cut Steinagel down at the plate. ' - Han wasn't to be had from then on, until he left for a pinch-hitter in the seventh. Jim Lee fin ished op and he also turned back ' the Salems. . Krause retired the first 10 Eu- - gene swingers before a base on, balls rot him into trouble in the fourth. After walking Ted ' Hesse, Krause was touched for his first hit, an infield bingie by George Matile, Eastburn then fol lowed with a hard single "to left, scoring the run.. The artistic righthander had his worst inning in the sixth, and pitched out of it with but one run scoring. Walks again (Continued on next page.) RADIANT - , GLASSHEAT '"'' By Continental The Sunshine Heat" No Ftre Harard No Noise No Dirt 01 Odor . - No Maintenance The only fullv automatic heat guaranteed bv Good Housekeeping For Free Estimate Phone 4-6263 1541' Fairgrounds R4- Salem Reg. Sale 1C4.50 279.50 399.50 .218.50 .324.50 .450.00 Ph. 3-9303 ass AY.iloble) Month Phont 2-4113 n mm m - : m