111' If II Knight Stars in Highlight Game Of Softie Loop Bob Knight pitched a three hitter and poled a long home run with a mate aboard as Paper Mill downed Mootry's 7-S in a hard fought City league Softball game Thursday night. The result tied the two teams for leader ship of the circuit. The Pheasants downed Knights of Columbus, 8-1, as Warren held the losers to four blows. The game was called at the end of the fifth because of the seven-run margin enjoyed by the Pheasants at that stage. In the Industrial division Warner's beat Post Office, 7 to 2 Friday night's schedule: In dustrial league, Paper Mill vs. Naval Reserve at 6:30; City league, 12th Street vs. Marine Reserves at 8, Randle Oil vs. Rock Wool at 9. Warner's 104 110 07 10 3 Post Office 000 110 0 a 7 4 Mlckenham and H. Conutock. Pheasants 012 338 8 7 K of C 000 000 4 3 MUler and Waters; Parton and Alley. Mootry's 000 Oil 35 3 3 Paper Mill .. . .010 340 X 7 5 3 Rawlins. Hoffert (8) and Henery; Knight and Woodruff. Salem Drops Finale Chiefs, 7-0, Spokes with Next F it kr.IIV.10K Winflia Ken Raffcnsberger, seated left, ' ""- wh0 has been pitching in tough luck for Reds most of season, was the beneficiarly of a wind fall when his teammates scored 23 runs on 26 hits in game between Cincinnati and Chicago Cubs, at Cincinnati, who hit three home runs, batted in 10 runs and got 6 hits out of 7 trys. Back row, left to right, are: Bobby Adams, who had three hits, Grady Hatton, who had 4 for 6, and Ted Kluszew skl, who had 3 for 6, one of them a towering homer over the center field fence, (AP Wirephoto) Cleveland Hits Warpath, Fails to Cain on Yanks New York, July 8 (U.B The Cleveland Indians continued their comeback charge in the American league pennant race today, but they weren't gaining much ground. The trouble seems to be that although the Indians are winning ball games, so are the New York Yankees. The world champions never will be able to overhaul the front-runners this way. Apparently snapping out the losing lethargy 8 Salem, Oregm, Friday, July 8, 1949 of which plagued them last month, Cleve- Major Standings (By United Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pot. W L Pet. Brooklyn 45 30 .800 New York 37 36 .507 Bt. Louis 43 33 .573 Pittsburgh 33 40 .452 nhiiaHinhl 41 as .532 Cincinnati 31 41 .431 Boston 41 36 .533 Chicago 38 48 .366 AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. W L Pet. New York 40 36 .653 Boston SB 36 .514 Fhlldlphta 44-31 .687 Washlnatn 32 41 .43B Cleveland 42 32 .568 Chicago 31 46 .403 Detroit 40 37 .610 St. Louis 34 51 .320 jUsnJta Thursday y' NATIONAL LEAGUE Bt. Louis 0, Pittsburgh 2. Chicago 6, Cincinnati 7. Brooklyn 5. Boston 2. Philadelphia 3, New York 11. AMERICAN LEAGUE Cleveland 8, Chicago 3. Boston 8, Washington 3. (Called end th: allow Boston to catch train.) New York 6, Philadelphia 3. Detroit 9, St. Louis 2. land's prides have won six of their last seven games. But tne Yankees have won 10 of their last 12. Consequently, that In dian victory streak has just gained one game in the chase. On July 1 Cleveland was 7 games out of first. Today they are 6V4 games out. Both teams won yesterday. Cleveland beat the White Sox, 8 to 2, at Chicago and the Ynnk ees snapped Philadelphia's five game winning streak at Phila delphia, 6 to 2. Boston's five runs in the first inning beat the Senators, 8 to 3, In a game halted after the sixth to allow the Red Sox to catch a train. Detroit hit Red Embree for iix runs in the first inning to beat the Browns, 9 to 2, at St. Louis. Pitching has been the bane cf the Brooklyn Dodgers all aeason, but there was nothing wrong with Joe Hatten's seven hit performance as the Dodgers licked the Braves, 5 to 2. Pitts burgh, meanwhile, licked St. Louis, 2 to 0, on Dino Restelli's two-run double to make the Brooklyn National league lead two full games. Dave Koslo hit two homers and pitched to his fourth victory for the Giants, 11 to 3, over Philadelphia, and Cincinnati beat the Cubs, 7 to 6, on Bobby, Adams' triple and Ted Kluszew- ski's ensuing single. EX-PUG CONN Red Hot Fielder Paralyzes Homer Oakland, Calif., July 8 U.R Thirteen-year-old Norman Lawrence is a very hot right fielder. When Elmhurst junior high hit a home run ball out Nor man's way with the bases loaded, he started to run. As he ran the friction lighted matches and firecrackers in his right hip pocket. As he frantically fanned his own personal right field, the Elmhurst players collapsed on their bases with laughter, scoring nary a run. The game was called on a technicality. OC Legion Walks To Woodburn Win Woodburn, Ore. Four walks and a hit batter were responsi ble for two runs as the Wood burn American Legion juniors dropped a 3 to 2 game to Ore gon City Thursday night at Ore gon City. Hall, Woodburn chuck er, held Oregon City to two hits, but his wildness in the sec ond brought about his defeat. The locals entertain Salem Friday evening at 6:30 and Sil verton at 2:30 Sunday afternoon. The final game is slated for Tuesday next week. Woodburn 3 3 0 Oregon City 3 2 1 Hall and Henderson; Hopp and Combs. Takes Dim WIL Standings (By the Associated Pressl W. h. FCt. Yakima .. Vancouver .55 27 .671 .48 31 .608 Spokane 44 38 .537 Wenatchee 40 43 .482 .457 47 .434 .432 Salem 37 44 Bremerton 36 Victoria 35 46 Tacoma 33 52 Results Thursday Victoria 18. Tacoma 2. Wenatchee 7. Salem 0. Spokane 12, Yakima 7. Bremerton 10, Vancouver 2. Wenatchee, Wash., July 8 Lou McCollum isn't the Western' International league's No. 1 moundsman by several notches but he is sufficiently proficient at the art of propelling a DaseDau to beat the Salem Senators. He did this very neatly xnursaay nigm when he held the visiting Solons to a very meager four hits. The result was a 7 to 0 white washing applied by the home town Chiefs who picked up 11 solid smashes including horn runs by Clint Cameron and Dick Faber. Faber's four master came in the fifth with two on board. Dick Sciarra was charg ed with the loss, although he was relieved by Jim Foster in the fifth. The game, last of a series of three, enabled the Chiefs to maintain their fourth place po sition while keeping Salem ir the second division. Wenatchee will entertain the Yakima Bears through Sunday while the Sen ators move into Spokane for four games with the Indians. Sa lem took the local series, two games to one. McCollum retired the Sena tors in order through three in nings and a walk to Hal Zur- cher in the fourth was the first time a Salem player reached first safely. A walk to Bob He- dington and a single by Hank Sciarra placed Salem's third baseman on third in the fifth but he died there. Again in the sixth Bud Peter son and Bob Cherry hit succes sive singles but nothing happen ed as Marty Krug lofted out to Jim Warner in center field while Roy Carlson fanned to nip a possible rally. The Chiefs, after picking up single runs in the second and third went to work in earnest on Sciarra in the fifth as they batted around. The Salem chucker walked Myers and Has kell with a sacrifice bunt by McCollum in between. Faber promptly drove them home with his circuit blow. Jim Warner was hit in the ribs by a pitched ball and Camerson drew a base on balls. Hal Rhyne,' back in the game as a starter for the first time in several days, was out on long fly to Zurcher but the left fielder's throw in was wide and Warner advanced to third. Nick Pesut singled to left center to drive Warner home for the fourth run of the session. A double by Faber to the left field fence scored Myers with a run in the seventh. Foster held the Chiefs scoreless thereafter. The Victorias blasted the Ta coma Tigers, 18-2 for the Ath letics' seventh win in eight starts. At Spokane, the Indians whacked the Yakima Bears for a 12 to 7 victory while the Bre merton Bluejackets staged a 10- 2 uprising at the expense of the Capilanos. Official Box Salem (0) W.Petrn.3 Zurcher.lf B.Petrsn.as Cherry, cl Krug, 1 Oarlson.c Hedingtn.3 Olsen, rf Sclarro, p Foster, p O.Petersn Total B H O A 4 0 2 3 Haskell, 3 0 Paber.rf 2 Warner.cf 0 Oamern.lf 2 Rhyne, 1 1 Pesut, c 2 Bryant, 3 0 Myers, ss 2 McCollm,p 0 3 0 3 4 1 4 0 S 3 0 2 2 11 110 (7) Wenatchee B H O A 4 113 1 2 2 7 3 7 0 3 1 5 1 0 0 0 0 0 33 11 27 33 4 34 13 Total Struck out for Foster In ninth. Salem 000 000 000 0 Wenatchee 010 141 oox 7 Winning pitcher: McCollum. Losing pitcher: Sciarra. Pitcher: Ip Ab H R Er So Bb Sciarra 4 ID 8 6 5 3 3 McCollum S 33 4 0 0 7 4 Foster 3ft 13 3 1 1 1 1 Hit by pitcher: Warner by Sciarra. Er rors: Myers. Zurcher, Krug. Left on bases: Salem 9: Wenatchee 6. Home runs: Cam eron, Aber. Two base hits: Pesut, Faber. Runs batted In: Cameron, Pesut 3, Faber Sacrifice: McCollum. Double plays: B. Peterson, W. Peterson and Krug. Time 1:53. Umpires: Mounger and Young. Tacoma 100 000 100 2 8 4 Victoria 024 210 45X 18 19 2 Kerrigan. McCord (7) and Warren; vu- curevlch and Day. Yakima 001 105 000 7 12 2 Spokane 053 001 03112 17 3 Sporer. Swelger (3), Bradford (7) and Tornay; Babbit, Werbowskl (7) and Rossi. Bremerton 000 511 00310 13 1 Vancouver 030 000 000 3 6 3 Dahle nd Neal; Ounnarson. Anderson (5) and Brenner. New York, July 8 U.R) An overstuffed Billy Conn, finger ing a nose shaped like a saddle. took a dim view today of the Heavyweight situation and fieur- ed that Lee Savold might be the Dest of a poor lot because of his punching power. .riusDurgn amy. who as a two-time challenger gave Joe Louis his best and worst fifihts isn i ininKing of taking a crack at me crown again himself. lm through." the handsome irishman said regretfully. "I'm loo old and I'm wackv inowsh already." You could tell that Billv. fill laDonng under the disgrace of nis second bout with Louis, be lieves that he could lick any of tne current Heavies. But nt SI he flinches from tll Vianr'c training it would reauire. Hn would have to take off 20 of those 200 pounds, and, then, there's that broken nose. Billy started a comeback last year, winning two fights by knockouts, but his nose was smashed in the process. 1 can hardly breathe now," e explained. "I'm going to have an operation on it. Maybe I can get Milton Berlc's old nose." ills last start was nn wl,ii,; tion in Chicago with Louis and that may have been the real clincher. It opened im the three- year-old wound of a lost fieht ind, more precious, lost prcs ige. For they never wore the same after thev fou Phi T.nuic a second time. In Conn's case it was even worse. For Billy in the old days was a brash, cocky man who would have laughed in the face of the devil. The first lime he met Lou is he was a happy hellion who fought with the reckless fury which is the glory of the Gaels. Then came the second time. But now Billy was cautious,sa man in retreat from the awful certainty of those tearing brown fists. The light was gone from his tight-lipped face and later, after they brought him to, the Irish in him was ashamed of the fight he failed to make. It's still a burden he bears, and probably always will, and his face tightens and his eyes darken when he thinks about it. "People keep bringing it up," he snaps with a defensive, apolo getic set to his shoulders. "I fought 80 good fights and all they remember, or want to talk By OSCAR FRALEY about, is that bad one." Conn made more than a mil lion dollars with his fists and he estimated that he kept about $400,000. Horses, when he had his own stable of six, took a lot of it. But he insisted that he still was "heeled" and currently is "doing all right," in a partner ship drilling for oil in Oklaho ma. (DANCE J To the Music of Lee and the I 1 I I Bh Melody Kam biers ALBANY ARMORY Sat., July 9 and 16 (Formerly playing at Moose t Halt in Albany) Admission 65c. inc. tax. Semi-Modern I WE'LL LAY IT - YOU BURY IT A genuine UNDERGROUND Lawn Sprinkling System complete with POP-UP heads and all Copper Pipe. Tailor made to fit your individual lawn and water problem. One section will cover over 1000 square feet of lawn area. A shovel is all you need. OUR PRICE Starts at $49.50 and Goes DOWN For full information call or write SALEM LAWN SPRINKLING CO. 734 North High St. Phone 3-4537 It pays to consult experience, for free! Also complete installations. OREGON TIDES Correct for Newport Hlth Low Ml 8 13 a m. -1.4 11:40 p.m. I I 5:54 p m. 3.1 7:01 a.m. -1.8 1:30 p.m. 8.8 8:48 p.m. 3 0 Mr 8.37 a m. t t 7:48 a.m. -1.8 3:13 p.m. 8.7 7:37 p.m. 3.0 ! It 1:33 am. 87 8:J a.m. .1.4 3:54 p.m. 6 5 8:25 p.m. 3 0 ! 9at II 2 (W a.m. 8 4 ( H a.m. l.l .. 30 p.m. 8 3.10 pm. 3.8 j Mr U 3:18 a m. 8 0:38 a m. .13. 3:57 p.m. 8 134 p.m. 3 3 I dT 14 3:01 am. 8.3 10:11 a.m. -0.8 : 4:41 p.m. 6.8 10:16 p.m. 3.4 Men! Special Purchase SAVE ON- Sale! ARROW SHIRTS $95-$24S TALTJES TO $5.00 - Sale Includes Famous BNRO ti AC & nr SHIRTS ' Alex Jones 131 N. HIGH AUTO AO-VICE. WHEN YOU PASS MY HUSBAND TELL HIM TO TRADE THIS CARNONA GUARANTEED USED CAR AT mm Zernial Starts Long Road Back After Shoulder Injury Chicago, July 8 (IP) The big blond guy wasn't mad at all at he walked shakily away from the hospital bed that possibly kept him from being the American league's rookie-of-the-year. "It was a tough break, that's all," grinned Gus Zernial, th Chicago White Sox outfielder, leaving Mercy hospital yester- aay alter a jo-aay stay. Handsome Gus entered the hospital last May 30, two dayi after a diving try for a fly ball shattered his collar bone at Cleveland stadium. At the time, Zernial was lead ing the American league in hit ting with .355, was tops in two baggers with 17, and was the big. get gate attraction the Sox have had in years. "Now, I almost have to learn to walk all over again, much less bat and throw a ball," said Zer nial, walking out of the hospital arm-in-arm with his pretty wife, Gladys and their one-year-old daughter, Susan. The doctor has ordered Gus to start strengthening his legs nxt week. Then, he'll begin work ing his repaired shoulder active ly in about three weeks, Just about when he comes off the in active list July 28. Zernial figures he may be able to break into the Sox lineup again about the first week of August. Lakes Preferred Over Streams in Fishing Bulletin Conditions for fishing over the week-end are reported "fair" in the weekly bulletin is sued by the state game com mission. Reports from the lakes in the Cascades indicate that those bodies of water are to be preferred over streams In the lower elevations. Davis and Elk lakes in De schutes county, the Metolius and Little and Upper De schutes near Maupin is low and clear. In Tillamook county all streams are low and clear with few fish being taken during the week and prospects for the week-end are no better than "fair." McKenzie river waters are reported "excellent" while Horse creek, Blue river and the south fork of the McKenzie are slightly below that desig nation. Salmon fishing is reported "extremely poor" In the Rogue. PLASTER YOUR WALLS There Is No SUBSTITUTE Pumilite West Salem GOlNHliNGJ Fishermen really go for the Nash Airflyte! They like the Twin Bed arrangement, huge luggage compartment, increased road clearance, 500-miles-between-fuelings economy (in the Nash "600" at average highway speed). Their wives like the smart style inside and outside, the lux urious comfort, the one-piece, curved windshield on all models, the Weather Eye Conditioned Air System. Call us to arrange for an Airflyte ride, soon in "America's most modem motor car." IN TWO GREAT SERJfSi THE NASH AMBASSADOR AND NASH "600 MARION MOTORS 333 CENTER STREET 1 Business Opportunity! The Owl Drug Company is opening a new Super Drug Store in the new Capitol Shopping Center at Center and North Capitol streets. We want a Salem man to manage this store. He should have a good background of retail merchandising in drug or allied lines, be able to organize and train his sales staff, prepare advertising copy, etc. Salary and participation in store earnings. If you qualify, reply giving full details. Interviewi after July 18th. Confidential of court. Reply to Box 287, Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon Thrill to new high in beer enjoyment! SICKS' SELECT Extra Pale will win your favor for flavor with each smooth, distinctive taste. Buy-Try-Compare and you'll make SICKS' SELECT your choice every time. WHEREVER BEER IS SOLD with ANY BEER from ANYWHERE! MO! QUARTS CANS STUBBIES and the handy 12-PAK' SICKS' BREWING COMPANY m SALEM. OREGON