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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1940)
THE BEND BULLETIN SPORTS GENERAL NEWS SECTION TWO VOI.UMK XI.V. THE I1ENI) HCM.ETIN, BEND, OREGON, T Hl-'KSOAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 21. 1910 NO. 01 BROWNS DUE TOMOVEUP Cellar Stay Is Ended Claim Managers SI. IouiM U Predicted lo Knnain u Second Division ('lull Fan Anltihiu, Tih, Miinh 21 'II''. Time till Is it Kioitl healer, iwt itiv uuuin thr St 1.41111 (fwn aie look ing ftH wmii to binder lltiiig filler year tf litiUirc And (or u i-hi'i whit h was lii-krd 1)1 timm Id it year for a itrw St. Ixmiu low, the lliuwiui urr tiiifhty f'lilpr. Mrr outtifUl utrenitlh, ft rVr IhiUriri'tl uMt) more rxiM-i irm il set nf tttti lu rn Mini ii new ahm utitp huvr NltinuMrr Kieil tiuttry lutklliK It) t Ilvr lertiw n limit (mishtim lift wnmr than in ft mil itf the WMtttinultin Henutots ami Philadelphia Alhlellr "WrVf Kt imirt tlexihillty whJ lirltf-r IhiUiM Mil HfiiUllll, ' ' Haney, whit known t- nuit h.w reul Mtmvenvrtit tin trip r rr h lr his hut. "It's kill) an 'if clot with cujHtol '1. hut tlw wny the fellnws air huolltnK thu HtrihM. t litfutr we ut(ht In wind up smth or better. "Ijt prtntf wo lnrtel tf f with ntily Iwu pilrhrr who liail nrliuliy wiii fmir or live luill p.imea in the major leuKtiea Murk Nrwvmi and H.murd Mills AllhotiKh Ncwmhu' Itotir. we have i-rveml men who'vr down they ran win In thr ma)r9 Ktdrn Auker. Vernon Kennedy, Mill. ItnKic ljwm. Iloh lliirtis, Jtthniiy Whitehead, Juke Wulr ami Jm kir Kriirnrr " Tlwre air nUo a lew ritnkira, amh Out Our Way By J. R. Williams PXlTrC NOT TAKE Ar ITS ABOUT AS SCRIOUS JSCBAICKBUTMX) CMAMCES WE'I LIAKG AS A MOf-CUITO &ITE, .CAM BET THAT 1 VOLl TO THE HOSPITAL BUT "THE BULL OF "THE ) ASSISTANT FORG 1 ' V MIGHT AWAY, SO YOU i WOOPS MASKf T RE f IAAK1 HOPE S ft AIN'T CAM CET PBOPt.R VI COVERED HIS SPEECH TRIVIAL! HE'S LOOK.' -v CAE SX S VET AT ALL THIS COM- V. IkXi FOR A PRO - "ffm) I CEPN--HF. CAN'T FIODREMOTlON, AKJO HE y'S' -- J ( THAT THE ASSISTANT WJN'T WISH THC J 1 L?zT Tl rowtNVAH is sreuous bull awv haro C"")i7 3 n r WITH THAT S7RETCHneLUCK,OFCCXJRSE, r x. i - w j Learn to Bowl for Health and Fun! Well flu you frr Imoiu any day or rvrniiif til tlii popular, rancrtilal. and raty-lo-lrarn upon UoMlinx krrp your body lit and mind alrrl and provide yoii wilh a rang rnlal paollmn. Try il loilay! Leedy's Alleys Ixrrfy'i RrrrrftUon Cmlrr II. U Br IK Mrr. at Southpaw Knnl Hillidl. 22 Ram wiiuirr lur San Antmm lu-.t sununrr, who khnuld help A lun StiMiiK. Souttlr'n iiiar iltort slop wlio wa i-iiukIiI in the draft by tht HrnwtM mt lull, in being ctnmtrd umiu to tixhlcn up thr right in I w Id iiur And rtM thr pitt hir a load. A ! i luMiy (ifliirr and a nmkJ hu-vllrr, Kliani m only to hhow Itr can tilt I AmciUitn hum it- pitihiiiM trlt'r than hf ouild (or MiiiiiiKrr IiiKrr llnrn hy In hit hiM ttittr un M-vrrul wa hih io I jiit year he hit .'SMt un ( the ii mn t. j If Slrantfr ronira through and hr' ; thr only man on thr trlub at thr rno nwnt ll.tnry fi-rl run hundlr ffnrt I ntop Miluiaitorily- thrn the Druwru . hould have an inludd that mlr with thr rt ( tcotKr Mt-Qiimn rould pin v itt bar fur almost any club in tlu Imtfuc, mtd Harold ('lift, dr&pttr hia I tUll lump, Mil! rulm with thr top him-kt mrn at third. Don Hrft !nrr, a tuml flrldrr hut wrak at the 'pTatr, and Johnny Itrrardmo, a line pronpcHt RfarUntf hi aophiMnurv ra miii. will fiht it out fur the second t be )ob. Thr uulwld ha up un thr ' rmlit niilr, with n half tinrn lads j haMhiiK (or join, llirrr o( thrm arr r-Yankrrn Mvril lloui!. Jr Cul- lunhrr and Walter Judnic h with it'hH lowlw. Innnrr Titfrr. Kip Had icldl frtun thr White Sox and Itooktr 1 Joe Cliucr alvo in thr ninumft. All an tMtriitially tnnu hntrnt, i Aside from the still doubtful I thirtMop rxwllmn which thr hoprt to itrrnitihrn with trade fur aoine ptihty inf wider who ran handle that job, catching u the big queution mark. Joe Cilrnn frll down )adly lait year and ii attll a holdout. TTie only other catchrrm are Vountc Bob Swift, a fin ished man behind the platr but ahort un hittmK, and Sam Hunhnny, re called after a fair arason at Toronto. If thr catch in if La strenitthened out in lime, indicutioiia are the Brown will iduiw enrkrd improvement. With niKht baAeball to be introduced in St. Bowling Notes Tlie Independent lraguc teams rolled the following acorrc on Leedy's Recreation Alleys Wednesday nijiht: The Smoke Shop team won two Karnes and 1ut one Rame in play with Wwt Side- Service station. High Individual three-game score was rolled by Kd Uarnrs of the Smoke hhoo tram with 642 pins, followed KM. . t- t L. : ..t t L-.J L- pml.al.ly Will li kome rr.l caJ. 1 L" ',d " N",,n IwkMed over the ticket windows U t)ie club u anywhere except at the bottom of the standinics. The players them wives don't think they'll wind up there. Pacific Conference Ski Tourney Opens Seattle. March 21 'tli The Pacific Coast conference four-wav ski cham pionship opens today with the Uni versity of Washington defending its title aifuinxl Universities of Califor nia, Oregon and Idaho, and Wash ington Stute and Oregon State col letfr. The tournament open with jump ing at the summit of Snoqualmir pa.-w. Tomorrow thr collegians move to Mount Rainier for crtvut country competition, with downhill and Mal- club om rvrntx following on Saturday. YOUR FINANCIAL PROBLEMS ARE NOT SOLVED BY WORRY.. of the Smoke Shop with S50. Two hundred games or better were rolled by Ed Barnes of the Smoke Shop with 234. which was high game for the evening, 216. and his team mates. H. Nysteen 213, L. Duncan 306: West Side Service. J. Kargman 210; Doug's Service. L. Redifer 201. Tram Standings West Side Service ... Smoke Shop . Doug's Service .. Wall Street Service . Won Lost 40 32 40 32 35 37 20 43 !Urne ... (rap IHUnr .. N Tlran . . Outwan llatultrap . TtrfaU lSi4at Im(m KaMkt SIWff S4 1 lv 17? r4 Til. SIC Z 147 4 143 4 i 1 3 i-'.U 1H2 f.4: .loin tu wt iv: McLemorc's Sport Parade li;nltv Pr fliaff rmrap.ii'lnl it.o i; Tlayrr. While Dn.wn . . , SnJe . . . , krKi . I'Uinokl . HandK-ap , Weal Hr Hrke lt rA 2 lit Ul 1 is: us ir.a ivt un v 4 : i 3rd Til. I It I l. S i : huo mi m l HO 6.UI ;4 Total 1.2 M 1011 2P6 I'laTer. Siarka .... Ilnm Karitman .. llantlkap . . TftaU . Wall 8trH RrW Ul Sn.l 1.-4 IM i:o l!7 ITf 7 1X& 1ST 1T0 3r,t Til. ICS 4Vt l .'2 4r. US 4H7 1ST SSN 47 10 1 Si Pi IriAburg. Fin., March 21 If'-r It wasn't until todiiy that I realized there waft A defir.itr kinfthip ltween baelAll uf.d lxxtiig. A werttly a, yesterday I would have Ujutly (ar.d I rm-an "stoutly" Pi the tune of lb.r pounds arid twin chin.) denied their wan any connection between, fcay, r jyht field and a ritht trtrt. hut all of a sudden I found mv .self lolling under palm tree with Mje Berg of the BoMon Red Sox, ore of the retler minds, baseball or ottierwise. in tht country. And tje forr we quit lolling he had estab lished a definite relationship between Uie two. lfe Uund ihrm together with the expresKion "one-two punch." llirre never Wiia a Uixing charn pvitt who didn't have a (me-two punch, Berg pointed out. and then continued lo explain that the chief contention for the major league pen nants this year would be made by teams with the same thing. 'Let's look at the American league," Berg said. "Barring accident the main contention will be between1 the Yankees and the Red Sox. Each of lite clubs can throw a deadly one two punch. On the Yanks the one two is provided by Joe Di Maggie and Bill Dickey. DiMagjfio sets up the opuoMtion and Dickey knocks it out." Remembering Charley Keller. I suggested that perhaps the Yanki; had gone a step further and devel oped a one-two-three punch. "Please," Berg said, in a voice rich with melancholy, "let's limit this to jut two hitters. Now take the Red Sox. Our one-two punch w thrown by Jimmy Foxx and Ted Williams. Perhaps I'm biased but to me those two fellow form the bet one-two in baseball. I wouldn't swap them for anything in the league." Thr one-two punch holds true In thr National lrague. The champion Cincinnati Reds and their sternest challengers, the Cardinal, have the toughest bing-bang combinations in the Ford Frick belt. The Reds can throw Frank McCormick and Ival Goodman at opposing pitchers. And the Cards have Johnny Mize and Ducky Med wick, that is, if Medwick signs. And he is sure to. Speaking of Ducky Wucky, it will be he who will have to come lo terms. Unpopular with the players (who think he cost them the pennant last year by loaf ing ) and unpopular with Manager Blades (who resents the things Med wick has said about him) and unpop ular with Owner Sam Braadon (who thinks he is being shoved around a bit and held up) Joe probably will have to capitulate or sit out the 1940 baseball dance. But to Ret back to the one-two punch. All of the combinations men tioned present a right-handed hitter and left-handed hitter. That is the ideal combination. As Paul Derringer told me and Derringer ts a lair country judge that combination makes it impossible for a pitcher to let up even ft little bit. "Be the pitch er a right-hander or a left-hander," savs Paul, "he must bear down with all he has on at least one of them." But enough for this informative writing:. The next thing you know I II be ex laming the technique of the drug bunt, or why a good base runner Ui second with his left foot when running out a triple. 9U2 9t TtfB 2661 Daai's Strvkt riftvvra. Mohler 1HV Him 1M Ure tM Rotifer 201 Slate 147 Handicap SI Tntat 7n i.'.i 154 1M l-'.O mi Snl Ttl. IH Si 7 146 4 tiH 163 4V!4 L..4 UIXAKD TO PITCH Ontario. Cal.. March 21 Ui Mana ger Arnold Statz announced that Gene Li I lard would start on the mound for Los Angeles today in an exhibition game with the Philadel phia Athletics at Wri?ley field. YEAR INCOMES AVERAGE LOW , i Two-Thirds of Homes Have $69 a Month 4,000,000 Families. Have. Incomes of Only $312 Yearly j By Fred Bailey tt'niu! I'rna Staff CorrapntlrM Washington 'IP A government .survey (our years in the making ! .shows that two-thirds of all Amer ican famiJie lived on an average of J a month in 1935 and li6. Ihe survey included detailed re ports of income, spending and living standards of 300.000 families, repre senting a cross-section of 126 000,000 persons. It was the most detailed and comprehensive survey ever made. Economists studying the results of the survey made by the bureau of labor statistics, the bureau of home economics and the WPA have learn ed new facts concerning American living habits. There were 4.000.000 families ; mostly on relief who had an average income of only $312 a year. That ' was 14 per cent of the national pop- ulation. Economists estimate that ai "decent living standard" for ft fam- Uy of four costs $1200 a year or' more. $700-$HO0 Group largest j There were another 8.000.000 fam- j ilies comprising between 25,000.000 and 30.000.000 persons who had anj average income of $758 ft year. Thus, it was indicated, 42 per cent of the! nation lived on incomes averaging less than $50 month. j Another 7.000.000 families 23 per, cent of the total lived on incomes averaging $100 a month. The survey , showed that about two-thirds of the i nation lived on incomes of less than . $1,500 a year and averaging $826. i Ihe average income for the nation as a whole was $1,622 for each fam ily. The highest 5 per cent in the in- 1 come bracket had 27 per cent of the ' national income and the highest one per cent had 14 per cent of the in come. Thus, the highest one per cent had almost as much income as the 40 ptr cent of the families in the lowest income group, the report said. Fewer than 4 per cent of the families in the j country had incomes of $4,000 or i more, a year. j Food Ratio Shown ' The report showed that 4.200.000 families in the lowest income group 14 per cent of the families bought , only 6 per cent of the food con sumed in this country. The next 27 5 per cent of the population bought 20 per cent of the food. Agriculture department economists : said families receiving $312 spent un! average of $1 per person per week for food, while those receiving S1.2T0 '. a year spent an average of $2.18 per person. "If cs'ery family receiving les1 than $100 a month could be raised to 1 tlat level expenditures for food i would increase by $1,900,000,000 a year ami the national food bill would ' b? 14 per cent Urged. Milo Perkins. president of the Federal Surplus l Commodities Corporation said. He estimated that food expend i- ' tares by the group now receiving less than $100 a month would be increased by 21 per cent. Farm tncvne wru!d be boosted by $1,000,000,000 a year.1 he said. Fullerton. Cal.. March 21 Ui The Portland Beavers play Sacramento again today in the second of a two- i: 'earne sorinff exhibition series. The ISolons won yesterday's game. 4-3, .-.ilnftf 19 inninnc ju f-rt1 after 12 tnnincs STARS TO MEET WHITE SOX Los Angeles, March 21 tlP The Hollywood Stars play the Chicago White Sox in a spring exhibition game at Gil more field today. Man ager Bill Sweeney said he planned to start Hi Bit horn on the mound with either Lou Tost of Paul Smith finishing YOUR DEBTS INTO REASONABLE MONTHLY PAYMENTS . . . WITH A FIRST NATIONAL PERSONAL LOAN Paying accumulated debts "a little at a time" may be costly as well as a source of worry. You may save money by paying them all at once with a personal loan . . . repaying the bank in convenient monthly instalments at reasonable terms. LOW COST LOANS OF $50 TO $1000 You need not be a depositor to borrow from this bank. K. E. SAWYER, Managtr R. r. MOLLNER, AttMant Manager derq Dnnnci first nnTiannii onuEZ OF PORTLAN D "The Nnf National Bank Weft of fhe Rock.i R riDIIAl DI-OtIT INSHIANCt COI0 - i- IPILAralOTlH change to ALEHITE Summer jGear Lubricant Be pure to get more tKaTi-just-ordi' nary luoncation wnen you cnange rjAy7 forlsummer driving. Allmitft Summer Gear Lubricant has r theVsTAYING POER'whicir wilU ' i - vv will give you'all-the-way-safety from k. i i ma now until world aeries ume, BENE) AEAE C. South of Poit Office Phone 193 Swing Out EASTER MORN the ; well r dressed man 0 Jm) When you slip into one of these alrefc new spring suits . you are nod . aware of the suit itself. Jusl a swetf feeling that all to well, and that you are confident of your own appear 0 u SUITS Style-right suits made by Timely and Curlee that represent a awell way to start the new mun. Com plete selection of new fabrics and style assures you of the best selec tion. $24.50 Otheri $29.50 to $39.50 SLACKS Fine new gabardine bi'dford cords, and covert slacks in plain and pat terned colors, in regular sizes. Use them in the current mixer styles of sport coat and slacks, $4.95 fo $7.95 2 -Piece Sport Suits Uptown Sportswear by Michael-Steams that does not include the conventional vest. A current style but CIO TC priced up to $24.50 3 Sport Coats Colorful Sport Coats mixed with slacks male possible many en semble combinations end compared with new suit prices, it offers economy too. i0 OC Priced up to $ 1 6.50 $7 oO) Sport Shirts the not Sport Shirts in the newest fabric and collar types. Nope women won't walk off with fashion honors this sprinq . . with the array of clothes at the ' ' ' Cfl rtft S. 4 N. Men's Shop T 3 1 iUU Others to $4.95 Freeman Shoes Dress Up in Freemans! A host of styles in brown, black, tan and white, black and white. They represent styles C1 AA that rate "ace high" anywhere you go "W t 1 MEN'S "UXSHOP Ken Moody, Manager "We Dress The Town" Use Bulletin Want Ads for Best Resultsl I,. ,.. -I,- Highway hazards and unpleasant weather condition! may be forgotten. Enjoy the comfort oi Union Pacific modem air-conditioned trains. "MEALS THAT APPEAL" Satisfying moats oa the Portland Rosa as low aa 23 easts for broakisst, 30 cents for luncheon, 3S cents lor dinner. Other features: Registered Nurse-Stewardess; Porter service and flea pillows In Coaches. Ask us about Pick-up and Delivery Service FREE FOLDERS Stop in at our conveniently located olllce for folders describing our travel service. Call or Write J. W. PADDEN, O. A.' 112 OrefM St, Pfcene 3 . 7321