PAGE TWO
pTwenty
MATCH PLAY
r STARTS SOON
iPlayers Are Placed in
: Bracket of 32
-Twenty seven men qualified for
the first annual duffers tournament
J at the Bond Golf club, and first
, round matches are to begin Satur
day afternoon, with the M. P. Cash
man trophy at stake. Every qualifier
.vjjl have a chance to win the cup,
according to A. A.' Clapp, who is
in charge of the tournament, and
there will be additional priies
Honough to allow at least one for each
of the 27 entrants. The prizes arc to
"be awarded at a stag dinner to be
I held In the dub house.
The 27 qualifiers were placed in
a bracket of 32, with five byes, in
"order to make it possible for alt to
compete for the cup. The beaten 16
in the first round will form the con-
solution flight.
J Pairings for the first round arc as
follows: Dr. J. S. Grahlman to M.
P Cashman; William Burrel vs.
"TBch Hamilton; Dr. Grant Skinner
I vs. A. N. Curtis: F. O. Minor, bye;
-A. R. Leary vs. Gerry Horstkottc;
J. E. Smith, bye; E. L. Shevlin vs.
G. C. Pendcrgaat; A. E. Hill vs. Carl
'. Johnson: H. C. LaBortcw vs. D. C.
HbIc; Douglas Ward vs. Clarence
J Curtis; A.. A. Clapp vs. E. R. Ryan;
Hod Richards, bye; Paul Hampson
vs. W. D. Ex-am; H. C: Friedlcy bye;
" C. J. Monahan bye; Kenneth Cruik-
shank vs. Horace Richards.
Scores in the qualifying round,
with handicaps and net scores, were
"as follows; Dr. J. S. Grahlman, 89
! 20-69; A. R. Loary, 100-25-75; A. E.
. Hill, 92-20-72; A. A. Clapp, 98-24-
74; . Dr. Grant , Skinner, 94-20-74;
Paul Hampson, 97-20-77; Horace
I Richards. 94-20-74; Hod Richards,
. 101-20-81; Douglas Ward, 98-20-78;
E. L. Shevlin, 101-20-81: Gerry
I Horstkottc, 123-25-98; W. D. Evans,
113-24-89; F. O. Finor, 103-22-81: D.
I C. Hale, 108-25-85; H. C. Friedley,
- 105-20-85; Clarence Curtis 116-20-I
96; A. N. Curtis. 113-26-87; H. C.
LaBertew, 95-24-71; G. C. Pender
; cast, 147-24-123; Carl Johnson, 106
. 20-86: Ben Hamilton, 112-20-92; C.
J. Monahan, 99-20-79: Kenneth
. Cruikshank, 1U-25-86; J. E. Smith,
107-24-83; E. R, Ryan, 108-20-88; M.
p. ""Cashman, 109-24-85; William
jBurrcll, 98-20-78.
: Sport Tabloicb
Taeomn, Wash. Fred Lenhart,
1781, Tacoma, finished strongly
here last night to cam a draw with
aMaxfe Kosenoioom, ill, ngm ncavy-
weight champion, in a non-title bout
"Roscnbloom pi lea up an eariy rcau.
I In the eighth, he claimed a foul, but
. finished the fight after a five-mm-
ute jest Lenhart opened up and
"took -the fight away from the cham-Jpionin-
the closing rounds. In two
previous meetings, each fighter won
a decision. Roscnbloom insisted on
I an overweight fight.
San Francisco. Ed "Strangler"
I Lewis defeated Ted Cox, two falls
. out of three; Vic Christy drew with
George Hagen.
I ' Chicago. Pitcher Paul Gregory
has been released on option to the
" Milwaukee American association
J club by the Chicago White Sox to
make room for Pitcher Harold Haid,
recently purchased from the Seattle
J Pacific Coast league club.
Gresham. Horse racing with leg
J alised pari-mutuel betting returned
to Oregon today after more than a
quarter century. The 20-day race
meet, first under legalization of the
. Inst legislature, will be held at the
Multnomah county fair grounds.
Seventy two horses are entered in
today's races.
: Chicago. Equipoise, often called
America's greatest race horse since
I Man O' War, will attempt to pack
135 pounds tomorrow in the $10,000
Arlington handicap and beat a field
. of the best handicap horses in the
. land. C. V. Whitney shipped his
great horse west to race in the stars
" and stripes at Arlington July 4, but
scratched him because of the heavy
impost, one pound more than he s
. In,nrrnw A field of a
dozen will start in the Arlington
,, handicap.
. Experiments with shelled green
a . i , I. , tV.n.r Inci, tlinir susar
if held after picking, but the sugar
. docs not turn into siarcn as is yv
ulnrly believed.
TRAIN SCHEDULE
S. P. & S.
Leaves 8:55 p. m.
Arrives 7:40 a. m.
STAGE SCHEDULE
Bend-Portland
(via Wapinitia Highway)
Leaves 7 a. m. and 5:15 p. m.
Arrives 1:55 p. m. and 9:15 p. m.
Bend-The Dalles
Mt Hood Stages (via Maupin)
Leaves 7:00 a. m.
Arrives 9:15 p. m.
. Bend-The Dalles
Mt Hood Stages (via Shaniko)
Leaves 5:15 p. m.
Arrives 1:15 p. m. '
.. Bend-Klamath Falls
Leaves 1:50 p. m.
Arrives 4:45 p. m.
Bend-Burns
Leaves 8:30 a. m.
Arrives 4:50 p. m.
Bend-Silver Uka
Leaves 9:00 a. m.
Arrives 1:00 p. tn. -
Beod-Prineville
Leaves 12 noon, 8 p. m.
Arrive 8:20 a. m 5:45 p. m.
Bend-Chemult
Arrives Bend 9:45 a. ra.
Leaves Bend 1:30 p. m. '
Seven Qualify for First Annual Duffers Tournament Here
Out Our Way
that famous Barefoot" Bov Poem
WAS NEvje COMPLETED T SHOULD
Fv"SvA UP UWe. -THIS
BAQE.FOOT BOV.THe. LAZV SouU,
t??Tr CAV
TO MAKE.TH SHtETS LftSTOOTTH VWCEW.
iw HEARS A GEstTLE
X-.r-.Vj, Ht MAWS AM'
Gridiron Interlude
. The professional footballers have !
taken a leap and bound on the way j
toward stealing the show from thel
colleges. Changes they have made in
the rules during the summer prom-'
ise a return of old thrills and some
new ones added.
. First, -the -pros arc moving the
goal posts back to the goal line,
which is expected to revive the lost
art of place kicking and drop-kicking.
The suspense of watching a ball
soar from the toe of a Bricklcy or a
Pfaffman on the 35-yard line, des
cribing a deadly arc between the
posts, is to be restored to the stands.
More Passing
..A brand-new rule - on forward
passing gives the pro game a new
offensive attraction. Under inter
collegiate law, the passer must be
at least five yards back of the line
of scrimmage. Under the pro ar
rangement, a man may fling the
leather any time before he crosses
the scrimmage stripe.
This pass rule will do much to
confuse the defense and increase the
scoring. Imagine a back circling a
wing, drawing the secondary defense
over to stop him, then suddenly
putting on the brakes and hurling a
mile-long pass to a pal far down the
field. Or faking a line buck.
straightening up at the line of
scrimmage and lobbing a short one
over to a companion back!
Courts Deception
This will make pro football an ot-
fensive game, and a free-scoring.
see-saw battle that ought to keep
the customers on their toes through
out. The pass rule also is an invi
tation to trickery and surprise.
Coaches throughout the league al
ready have doped out scores of
strange shifts, based on the decep
tion this legislation allows.
" Pop Warner would be right at
home in the pro league this year. As
it is, his decemul disciple, Lone star
Dietz of the Boston Redskins, is
pretty sure to have a pleasant and
successful season.
.
Did You Know That
The late Hiram Connibcar must
have taught Al Ulbrickson, coach of
Washington's Husky crew, a little
more than he taught Ed Leader,
Yale's mentor . . . that's one way of
accounting for the Washington vic
tory over Yale ... by one-fifth of
a second . . . Louis J. Soresi, the
newest of the Camera Association
of Managers, is in there taking a
cut in the interests of Primo's fam
ily back in Italy. . . . Owen Madden,
former assistant manager, recently
terminated his sojourn at Ossoning,
Travel By Bus
At Bargain Fares
FROM BEND
to
Portland
Seattle
Spokane . . . .
Lewiston . . . .
Pendleton . . .
The Dalles . . ,
Eugene . . . . .
Klamath Falls ,
San Francisco ,
Los Angeles . ,
Chicago - - -
One
Way
$3.75
5.75
11.25
12.20
7.20
4.25
4.00
4.25
11.75
16.55
38.75
60 Day
Rd. Trip
$6.40
9.90
16.35
16.40
10.35
,6.40
6.00
' 6.40
19.90
28.55
58.15
Mt. Hood Stages, Inc.
New Depot, IOCS Bond St.
PHONE 500 BEND, ORE.
VMorm,c fp?
N. Y.. and moved back into New
York City ... so he probably is as
sistant manager again. . . Will Duffy
is Cameras envoy plenipotentiary
to the United States . . . Good Time
Charley Friedman is representative
extraordinary, with or without port
folio. COAST LEAGUE
tHr United Pm,
The San Francisco Seals defeated
the league leading Sacramento team
Thursday in a game marked by two
notable happenings t e.: the dis
placement of Seattle by the Seals as
cellar warmer and the single- Joe
DeMaggio hit in his 56th consecutive
came.
DeMaggio San Francisco's boy
wonder hit on his third time at ba
maintaining his march toward the
world's record of 69 consecutive
games in which Joe Wilhoit of the
Western league set in 1919.
The Seals won, 3 to 2, with Curt
Davis holding the Senators to seven
hits. Hartwig yielded 10 safeties to
DeMaggio and his mates.
Jim Oglcsby, Los Angeles bat
wielder, hit in his 42nd consecutive
game as the Angels dropped an 8 to
6 decision to Oakland. The Uaks
overwhelmed the Angels in the first
mnmg. scoring six runs. n. inret-
rim rally In the seventh was insuffi
cient for Los Angeles, which used
Ward, Ballou, Miller and Stitzel in a
vain effort to halt the Oaks. Mie
Salinsen went the distance for Oak
land. Portland tallied its third straight
victory over the Mission club by a
5 to 2 score. The Reds were able to
get eight scattered hits from Rudy
Kallio, leading league twirler. Pil
lettc and Osborne were in the box
for the Missions.
Frank Shcllenback, Hollywood
pitcher, won a ball game from Se
attle with a startling pinch hit in the
ninth. With the Indians leading, 3
to 1, and Jacobs, Page and Arbel
bidc on bases, Shcllenback stepped
up and slapped the first pitched ball
for a home run, giving Hollywood a
5 to 3 win.
MAJOR LEAGUES ;
New York, July 21. IP The
Chicago Cubs and Pittsburgh Pirates
today were in full cry behind the
New York Giants threatening to
overhaul the National league lead-:
ers in short order. j
. The race tightened yesterday I
when New York dropped a 6 to 5
decision to the third-place Pirates, !
and the runner-up Cubs downed,,
the Phillies. This left the Giants only ,
two and a half games ahead of Chi- ;
cago, with the Corsairs trailing the j
Cuhs by a scant half-contest. !
New York was shaky in the field, ;
contributing three errors to thej
i Pirate victory, the seventh Pitts-;
burgh -triumph in the last nine j
starts.
Benched for light hitting, Babe
Herman returned to the Cuhs'j
linc-UD and cauallcd the National i
leafluc record by smashing out three
home runs as Chicago crushed the '
Phillies, 10 to 1. He also made a
single, driving in a total of eight
runs.
I Boston shaded St. Louis, 3 to 2,
I when the Braves scored the tying
! and winning runs in the ninth as a
i result of Pinky Whitney's homer,
I followed by Lee's walk and Rabbit
I Maranville's triple.
Brooklyn wound up only halt a
game ahead of the last-place Cin
cinnati Reds, who blanked the
Dodgers, 1 to 0.
New York and Washington re
mained tied for leadership in the,
American league when both were'
defeated. Cleveland downed the
Yanks, 3 to 1. Detroit blanked
Washington, 1 to 0.
Philadelphia nosed out SL Louis,
6 to 5, when Frank Higgins' single
with the bases loaded drove in
Mickey Cochran in the 10th, enabl
ing Lefty Grove to triumph over
Holland Stiles in a pitching duel.
THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND. ORE,
By Williams
Boston blanked Chicago's' White
Sox 5 to 0 behind George Pipgrns'
five-hit flinging.
Bend Kitten Players
Beat Redmond Team
Bend's 20-30 club kitten ball team
invaded Redmond Inst night and
emerged with the scalps of a collec
tion of all-starThcpBend team won
by t score" of 7u lv 15 in a contest
that ended in almost totul darkness.
Bend's batteryinen, Balliintyne and
Fletcher, toiled through the seven
innings, while Redmond called on
iwo pitchers, 0ksley and Parker,
to toss the kitten ball to Daughcrty,
catcher.
The 20-30 club has scheduled a
game here with the Federals of the
Redmond league and may have an
other game with the nil-stars.
NATIONAL
R. H.
New York j..--'--" 6 13
Pittshtiroh .. . 5 H
Schumacher, boh, tiara ana m;m
cuso, Richards; Swcnlonic, lloyt and
Grace.
R. H. E.
Boston - - 7 12 0
St. Louis - 0 3 0
Belts and Hogan; Walker, Vance,
Mooncy and Wilson.
R. H. E.
Brooklyn 1 7 - J
Pinrinnati 2 0
Bcnge. Shaute and Lopez; Derrin
ger and Lombarm
AMERICAN
n. h. E.
Cleveland J
New York '
Hudlin, Conolly and Pytlak; Van
atta, Moore and Dickey.
Chicago 2 6
Boston . li 8 , '
Gaston, Wyatt and Grube; Rhodes
andFerrell. j, jj
c. iic 6 13 . 0
Philadelphia - 3 15 2
(12 innings). Hadley Bnd Shea,
Rucl; Mahaffcy and Madjeski.
R. H. E.
Detroit - i ,? 2
Washington ' " 0
Frazier, Fischer, Hogsett and Hay
worth, Dcsautcls; Whitehill and Sc
well. - -
Greatest
Value
TIRE
"38
IN
JTffl
Frenchie's Service Station
KELLY-SPRINGFIELD
1026 BOND
Oneral Prtrnleam Station N'o. 2, Rpnrf.
Ontarr Urtvr Ktr.tr Station. Bend.
Vjl 8Mo K-rlrt Hlallon, Hind.
Pclil'a Motor Baits. Bend.
Mac and Slirk. Btnd.
Rock IMk Strrlte Station, Btnd.
U. C. I'allncr, Chtmult.
FRIDAY, JULY 21, l'.Ktlt
BRITAIN SWEEPS
DAVIS CUP PLAY
Vinos and Perry Heaten in
Singles Matches
Roland Garros Stutlium, Ai.toufl,
I r iuiky, uuiy .... wrr rjigianu .
i made a clean .sweep of today's open- :
I matches of the Anglo-American I
Davis cup battle. !
I Ellsworth Vines, U. S. nutioiuil
! champion, proved no match for lien
j ry Wilfred lUmmy) Austin, the
j Knclishmnn wtnijEng in straight sets,!
6-1. 6-4. Vines was able to score
only Miigte points in four surcevstvv
gomes, the lust three of the first '
.set, and the fust game of the sec- j
ond set.
Frederick J. Perry won the sec- j
ond match, defeating Wilmer Allium ,
of Texj'.s 6-1. 7-5, 6-4. i
The result in the first mutch was ui
.stunning Mi(f ise to mast of the gal- ,
lory of 8.000 which expected to see '
Vines win, or ut least to play on
more nearly even terms with the .
Hntish player. (
Vines was hopelessly outclassed
from the start, was guilty of repeat
ed double faults, and almost contin
ually drove returns into the net.
Vines was plainly worried after
dropping the first set, and he could
not bruin his famous cunmmball
service into proper condition. Austin
meantime was plavitu; cool I v, and
was making the lanky American run
ull over the court. I
Austin scored . repeatedly with j
blistering driMCs to the baseline, but
the British player, clad in white
shorts and half hose, won more ;
points on Vines' faults than on his ;
own placements. j
American hopes to beat England
and thus gam the right to meet I
France in the challenge round rest-
ed upon Wilmer Allison of Austin,
Tex., who played Frederick J. Perry 1
In today's second match, 1
The crowd of 8.000 which was
stunned by Vines' lack of form wusj
! r..n.. -:...J u.. .1.. t
set defeat of Allison.
America's chances to win the right ,
to meet France in the challenge j
round were scarcely "100 to 1", as;
one excrt put it. The Americans ,
would have tti win tomorrow's,
doubles match and the two singles,
m.-ttches Sim day Hi order to enter ;
the rhnlienKe round. j
This seemed nn all but impossible!
task, for Austin displayed rnnuijh
tennis class today a to Mive Allison
a terrific assignment, and utiles
Vines displays an about face from
the form shown in lnsinK his Wim
bledon crown to Jack Crawford of
Australia, and ill bowing in straight
sets today, he will prove no mutch:
for Perrv on Sunday.
N'o sound explanation of the rout j
of the Americana was forthcoming.
Partly their defeat scorned due tot
t.-u'o frioht. hut it was difficult to7
"fumtcrsianu how such veterans ol
ri-mvrleri eal erles as vines ami Alli
son could have been atfcclcd ny thi'j
crowd of 8.000, mainly French ten
nis fans with no essentially patriotic
interest in the outcome.
It was recalled that England In
1931 scored a similar surprise, clim
inatinK the Americans who were be
lieved destined to reach the chal
lenge round.
Lions Nose Out Leedys
In Kitten Ball Contest
The Lions broke into the win col
umn of the Harmon playfield kitten
ball league yesterday evening at the
expense of the Leedy players, but
the victory was far from impressive
11 to 10 in favor of the clubmen.
The Lions were able to master only
five piayers nt game time, but the
Leedy team generously waived the
seven' player rule and permitted the
Lions to recruit enoueh men for a
team. This recruiting work Was so
effective thft the clubmen won.
Lineup of the Lions: Marshall, c;
Glllis, p; Grahlman, lb; Rcddington,
rs; Sawyer, 2b; Shick, Is; Saucrs,
cf; Branfield.lf; Selfors, rf; Benson,
3b.
Leedv's; Joanis, rs: Douglass. Is;
HISTORY
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bllbrldta (iroctiy and Kcr'lce Station.,
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MS
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Dyers, p; Haines, lb; Barrett, 'Jb;
Thompson, cf; Carton, 3b; Crawford,
If; Hiillantyne, c; Cook, if.
This evening, the married women's
tetttn wilt meet tjie Woolwoith giitt
on the llurmon diamond.
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The Century drive was open to
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