PAGC TWO
THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND. OREGON. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21. 1910
OHIOSTEAMS
ADD TO LEADS
Reds and Indians Are
Both Winners
Yankees Take Double Bill
From Detroit, 4-3
And 4-2
New York, Aug. 21 mi The all
Ohio world scries got a shot in
the arm today when the Indians
and Reds staged last ditch rallies
to pull games out ot the fire.
The Reds were losing, 2-0, go
ing into the ninth. Bill Lohrman,
Giants' pitcher, had the league
leaders handcuffed. They had
made only three hits off him and
hadn't got a man past second.
Then things began to happen fast
and furiously and when Bill Ter
ry and the Giants recovered the
Reds had won, 3-2.
Cleveland, with Bob Feller on
the mound, was trailing the Red
Sox, 5-2 going into the eighth.
Then the Indians went on the
Warpath and scored seven runs
off Jack Wilson and Emerson
Dickman to win, 11-6.
Both triumphs were highly im
portant to the pacemakers. Cleve
land picked up a game and a half
and increased its lead to 4'i
games over Detroit as the Tigers
bowed to the Yanks twice, 4 3 and
4-2. The Reds also gained a game
and a half and lengthened their
margin to 51 games over Brook
lyn as the Dodgers took a double
tumble before the Cards, 3-0 and
4-3.
The Yanks moved into a fourth
place tie with the White Sox as a
result of the double victory.
The Athletics gained an even
break with the White Sox when
Wally Moses stole home on
Thornton Lee in the tenth inning
of the nightcap, giving the Mack
men a 4-3 victory. The White Sox
won the opener, 6-1, on Edgar
Smith's 3-hitter.
Driving the rookie sensation,
Sid Hudson, out of the box, the
Browns annexed a 6-3 victory over
the Senators.
Claude Passeau scored his 15th
victory as the Cubs beat the Phil
lies. 9-4.
Pittsburgh pounded out 15 hits
to beat the Bees, 6-3, with Dick
Lanahan outlasting Manuel Salvo
to win his fourth game.
Police Hunt Fossil
Man Lost 11 Days
Fossil. Ore., Aug. 21 HBThe
Columbia highway, from The
Dalles to Pendleton was searched
today by state police and sheriffs
deputies for a trace of Ray Biann.
15, a Fossil poultryman who dis
Ippeared mysteriously 11 days
ago.
Police said Blann was last seen
leaving a hotel in The Dalles,
Aug. 10, and his automobile was
found abandoned on an old high
way four miles west of Pendle
ton. His trailer was missing.
Blann was understood to have
been on his way home after sell
ing several crates of chickens to
a produce dealer. It was believed
he may have picked up a hitch
hiker, who may have robbed then
slain him, police said.
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Out Our Way
' WHOOPEE A. SAMO
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SOFT
SOFTBALL PLAYOFF
AT QUARTER-FINAL
Pendleton Pitcher Hurls
No-Hit, No-Run Game
Salem. Aug. 21 LP This even
ing's softball tourney games:
8:00 Corvallis vs. Julia Lee
Wright of Portland.
9:00 Portland Firemen vs.
Medford.
Last Night's Games
Oregon City 9, McMinnville 5.
Pendleton 2, Salem Kennedys 0.
Salem Square Deal 8, Wood
burn 1.
Bonneville 7, Eugene 0.
Salem, Aug. 21 IP It looked
as if the main battles of the state
softball tournament would be on
the mound as the teams moved
into quarter-final play today.
Harvey Griffin, hurler for Pen
dleton, pitched the fourth no-run.
no-hit, game in tournament his
tory as he turned down the Ken
nedy Kids of Salem 2-0 last night.
Griffin last year led his squad
into the finals only to be defeated
by Joe Mann of Portland.
Burly Biff Georgesen barely
missed doing the same thing for
Bonneville as he engineered a 7-0
shutout over Eugene. Eugene's
lone hit came in the final out of
the last inning and was only call
ed a hit because the Bonneville
third baseman was a bit slow in
getting it to first.
Salem's other entry, the Square
Dealers, started out with a
healthy three-run first inning and
then kept adding to win 8-1 over
Woodburn. Hank Singer, Salem
pitcher, allowed the Woodburn
nine only four hits as the Square
Dealers let loose a ten-hit barrage
on Woodburn's bean.
Solid foods seem to absorb war
gases only on their surface layers,)
juaging oy xesis maae in nungary.
" THET'S WHERE YOU'LL X "
PLfcCE
PICKIM'S
Zale to Defend Title
Against Billy Soose
Chicago, Aug. 21 'U" What the
boys have been calling the "mid
dleweight muddle" for the last
couple of seasons reaches a cru
cial stage tonight when N. B. A.
Champion Tony Zale of Gary. Ind..
boxes 10 non-title rounds with a
boy who licked New York's cham
pion. If cleancut Billy Soose of Scran
ton, Pa., adds Zale to his list of
victims, which includes the New
York king. Ken Overlin, the di
vision sinks to an all-time low
with three champions two offi
cial and one unofficial.
It could happen but the bettors
say it won't. Zale's official heavy
body punching, which produced
a 13-round technical knockout in
a title bout against Al Hostak in
Seattle, established him a favorite
at 3 to 1.
34 Miles of North
Santiam Is Surfaced
Road machinery is being moved
and -last-minute work completed
to the summit of the North Santi
am highway, according to a news
dispatch from Detroit appearing
in the Oregonian.
"The 34-mile stretch from De
troit to the summit is now hard
surfaced, and the six miles on the
east slope, while still a gravel
road, is in fair condition," the
news story states.
This unit of the highway will
not be oiled this season.
'Sausage Fence'
Target of Nazis
The efficiency of Britain's bal
loon barrage in coastal defense
was indicated by Germany's
determined efforts to smash it
by recent mass aerial attacks
along the southeast coast Lines
of "sausages," like those above,
trail long steel cables which
nmcsh enemy planes.
HEAR
Norwin Kerr
Johnson
Speak On
V klEVER LE ARM HARD
PLAjGE" TO FALL ON I
WMUT MAkE VOL1
y &TA ON IS&TTfcK.-" "S
V A CACTUS PATCH
,u 16 THE BEST PLACE C I 1 ' '
"Technocracy"
Thursday 8 I'. M. 2111 Llnsler I'l
By J. R. Williams
m
J.f?Vll.UAM
Mruiimm.arr.i.iitM.ii.
PORTLAND NEARS
ITS ALL-TIME LOW
Seattle Extends Lead by
Beating Los Angeles
t By l oitnl )'ru)
The Rainiers took another
game from Los Angeles and ex
tended their coast league leader
ship to 15 1 j games, last night.
Seattle did it the hard way.
Trailing by two runs going into
the eighth, the Rainiers landed on
Lee Stine for three hits, coupled
them with Lou Stringer's two
errors and Spencer Harris' pinch
three-run homer and scored four
runs, to emerge with a 6-4 vic
tory. Hollywood took the third-place
Oakland team 5-4 when Krcnchy
L'halt singled Bill Dapper home
with two out in the eighth In
ning. Portland may notapproaoch Its
alllme low of .276 at the season's
finish, still a coast league record
for a tail-endcr, but the Beavers
are trying mighty hard. They
dropped another to San Diego
la.it night, 8-3. ; .
San Krancisco split a pair with
Sacramento, blowing the first
game by a score of 12 to 0, and
taking the second, 3-1.
Walter P. Chrysler
Funeral Held Today
New York, Aug. 21 HI--Funeral
services for Walter P.
Chrysler, 65-ycar-old automobile
manufacturer, were held today
at St. Bartholomew's church fol
lowing a family prayer service
at the Great Neck, Long Island
estate where he died Sunday
night of cerebral hemorrhage.
The informal service, attended
by members of the family and
household, was conducted by Dr.
M. C. McKechnie, rector of All
Saints church, Great Neck, N. Y.
The church service was conducted
by Rev. Dr. Frederic Underwood,
assistant minister of St. Bartholomew's.
DIAMONDS
Keepsake
Virgin Diamonds of Quality and Distinction!
Wide Rjuirfi nf Klvlm anrl P-tri'
. .
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I A. R Pond Co , Inc. I
214 S. Wsrreo St., Srrcui, N. r.
I naot iu ana to cover miilini
I "S?- plcu n' slmble book, !
I 'Etiquette of tbt Engsgemeac sad I
I Wedding. " a
I NllK !
Street sad No. J
-HDenttal Plates-
by DR. DLINN
All Branches of Dentistry on
Convenient Credit
Phone 286
Open Evening 7 to H P. M. on Monday, Wednesday and Friday
Miner Building, Bend, Oregon Over Woolworlh's
ALLEY OOP
f ACOMMAND ? I'sTcOMMANOeO TO
I uu MSUIW THAI toOL-DANetO III tVfe ON 7H6 CKUSTT K .. .1
VSU MSUAKU THAI OOL-OfMX&
McLenwrcfs
Sport Parade
(Unit! t'rwt " lxw.iiiJm
New York, Aug. 21 HI" My
its are of rummage sale cullbre
I know, hut even so they are
sharp enough to detect that the
handicap system in horse rucing
doesn't have a hand In glove re
lationship with the turf men's
talk uImuU the improvement of
the breed.
What's the use of improving
the breed and developing a fine,
outstanding horse if, the moment
he proves himself us such, you
pack his saddle with so much lead
he Is dragged down to the level
of Inferior thorotighbivdsT
For an example, take W. L.
Hi anil's Maryland bred star, I'liul
ledon. He Is to thoroiiKhhreds
running today what llrenda Fra
?ier is to glamour girls, lling
Crosby is to crooners, and Cher
rystone is to clams. In short, he is
the No. 1 critter, and if the racing
secretaries of the various tracks
would leave him ukme he would
n't lose any more races limn
Jesse. Owens would at an Klks
picnic.
But every time Challedon goes
to the post these days he Is as
signed so much weight It makes
you wonder why the secretaries
don't go the whole way and put
Oliver Hardy or Paul Whiteman
on him as a jockey, forge him a
saddle from Bethlehem steel, and
send the Marx brothers along as
observers. Maybe they will do
something like this before the
year Is out. They'll have to If they
are absolutely determined to slow
him down to where he doesn't
have any more speed than his
rivals.
The latest burden assigned to
Challedon is 135 pounds for the
merchants and citizens handicap
to be run at Saratoga on Satur
day. This is a full eight pounds
more than any of his rivals will
be asked to lug on the mile and
three-sixteenths Journey. If Sara
toga's handicappcr John B. Camp
hell, wanted to be real sure that
Challedon would he beaten why
didn't he make it a real mer
chants and citizens handicap and
insist that he carry a Saratoga
merchant or citizen as excess bag
gage? It would he novel, to say
the least, to see a hardware mer
chant or a real estate dealer
hanging on for dear life as Chal
ledon tore down the stretch.
Just why Challedon should be
given 135 pounds in this stake
and George E. Wiwener's Klght
Thirty let off with 127 Is a bit of
a mystery. The only lime the two
horses ever met was in the Mas
sachusetts handicap and Eight
Thirty ran first to Chaliedons
third. Since then, of course. Chal
ledon has won the Hollywood
gold cup in track record time and
Eight Thirty taken a licking in
the Saratoga handicap.
Speaking for myself, my top
weight was 187 and did I develop
staggers.
Tourney Qualifying
To Begin Thursday
(jualirylng rounds for the fall
tournament will start on Thurs
day and last for a week, accord
ing to an announcement made
today by Ted Meagher, chairman
of tournaments for the Bend Golf
club. It is anllcipated that the
majority of the club members will
do their qualifying play over the
week-end, especially on Saturday
afternoon and on Sunday.
Several other tournaments are
on the schedule, and there will be
plenty of action on the Bend
course before the snows of winter
whiten Central Oregon peaks,
Meagher promises.
Mountings from 95.00
Bear's
Jewelry Store
Bcnsnn flldg.
Iksr's Bral lot w.ohm. I UU, Jiailrr
nd Kisirtn
) 1 I JU' WaWTa LAiY f."i 1
GUARDSMEN TO BE
HOME SATURDAY
Hardest Maneuvers Over,
Writes Chute
Company 1 of llend, members of
which a iv now veterans of "lough
est maneuvers in the history of
the naiionul guunl, Ih scheduled
lo arrive home Saturday evening
at 8 p. in. or curlier, according to
word received from Cuptuln J. L.
Chute today.
I he llend company, part of an
army of some 41.010 western
troops concentrated In the vicinity
of lamp Murray, Wash., for the
past I luce weeks, "went Into ac
tion" a week ago Tuesday, at 8
p. in., and did not return to head
quarters unlll lust Saturday at
4 p. in.
"wo moved 21 nines in one 2-1
hour crlod on the march, plus all
me maneuvering in tne iieui.
Captain Chute wrote. "The boys
all cume through In fine uluioe."
Flower Show Held at
Prineville Is Success
Plineville, Aug. 21 iSueciuD
The flower show sponsored each
year by tne I'rlneville Harden
club was held this week at the
Ochoco Inn, and was a success
both artistically und financially.
One hundred sixteen entries
were Judged by Mil. Clifford Kits
mussen of Bend, Mrs. W. 1.
Franks ot Kudinund. and Mrs. S.
1). Mustard of Powell Butte. The
sweepstakes prizes were won this
year, first prln- lo Mrs. J. II.
Rosenberg on a tall banket of glad
iolus und second place by Mrs.
Carey Foster on a pialter arrange
men! ol while gladiolus. The
sweepstakes were judged tin
year by the public instead of by
judges.
Warren, Me. ill" - A 150 year-old
Indian grindstone measuring 15
Inches In diameter was found by
Alvuh SM-ar while excavallng a
basement for his garage.
Wfrii'iixtjfu y
9 $
PAUSE THAT RE F R ESH E S
BOTTLED UNDFK AUTHORITY Ot TIIH COCA-COIA CO. DV
IM Groonwood COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY Phono 49-W
Hi, Toots
KBND
Voice of
Central Oregon
TONIGHTS FHOGUAMM
MXI - ( Nelson
5:30 -The Bulletin News
5:45 Glenn Miller
5:50 Melodeers
5 55 Concert Hull of the Air
6:00 Hit Tunes of the Duy
6:15 Western Trio
6 30 Hawaiian Quintet
6 45 - Jan Gather
7 00 String Ensemble
7:30 - Old Time Scrvnudcr
7:45 Thomas L. Thomas
8:00 -Jimmy Horsey
8 30 -Vincent Lope
H (X) Organ Classics
9:30 Gray Gordon
10 00 -Sign Olf
Redmond Fire Truck
Gets Series of Tests
Redmond. Aug. 21 - Redmond's
new fire truck wus being put
through a series of leal yesterday
to determine elflclency of the
pumper and general deiendahlllly
of the fire fighting equipment. A
representative ol the Oregon In
surance Ruling bureau arrived In
Redmond Tuesday morning from
Portland lo supervise the li sts.
The forte und efficiency of a
pumper, II wan explained by
Mayor E. C. Parker, muy vary
considerably al different alliludes.
Therefore, lire engines, to be up
proved by fire underwriters, musl
be tesled In the locality where
Ihey arc In be used.
The Redmond city council will
officially uccept the new truck,
driven here from Delrnll, Mich.,
lust week by John Reining of the
Redmond volunteer fire depart
nient. provided today's lesls prove
satisfactory.
LIGHTNING STKIKKS TWM'K
ConsholKx'ken, Pa. ill-- Who
said lightning doesn't strike twice
In the same place" The home of
Paul I-ackman wus damaged by
lightning twice In four days.
Tooth brushes of nylon fiber ht
new in England.
Ice-cold Coca-Cola is a quality
drink, the familiar drink that repre
sents four generations of experience
in refreshing millions. Its clean, tin
gling taste brings a delightful after
sense of real refreshment.
apteh he& et a couple op Ivif'v
CLOUT OF Trtl AH.HE WONfT I VW 0K. 1 I
BE SO FREE WITH HIS DAD- I I
SUMMED COMMANDS
1310
KilocycUt
Tliiimduy. Augunt Mill
7:00 (in the Mall
7:15 - Musical Coffee Cup
7:45 Mornlnii Clock
H 15 Slngln' S.iin
H 30 Bulletin News
8:35 Symphony of Melody
K 10 Master Singers
11:00 Old Family Almanac
0 15 Church In thu Wllduooil
11 30 Ranch Boys
11:35 Novachords
I:-I5 Utile Red SchoolhoiiM'
10.00 Musical Workshop
10:15 Organ Treasures
10:20 WalUes
I0::ui Bulletin News
10 33 Redmond Hour
11:30 Man AIhuiI Town
11:33 Four llcllrs
11:45 Man on Die Street
12:00 Noonday Varieties .
12:05 AAA Touring lteMirlrr
12 10 Nooday Varieties
12:15 - Hollywood Sidelights
12:20 Ssiit New
12 25 World Bookman
12:30 Bulletin News
12 45 Fill niers Hour
1:00 The Quiet Hour
1:30 -Concert In Brass
2:00 Gobh'I Hour
2:15 Mary U-uis
2 30 Afternoon Muslcale
3:00 Old Refrulns
315 Five Shades of Blue
3::i0 Tropical Mood
3:45- Cunningham Slaters
4:00 Mutlni-c Mitlollea
4:30 - Thomu I. Thomus
4:45 Travel Talk
5.00 Ross Morgan
5:25 Society Nolea
5:30 Bulletin New
5:45 Wayne King
5:50 SMHiul
5.55 Concert Hall of the Air
6:00 From A to . In Novelly
6:30 Hawaiian Quintet
0 45 U. S. Army I'rugraiu
7:00 Symphony
7:30-Studtu Program
7 45 Wlrges Oithratia
8 00 U' Brown
8 30 - Blue Barron
!l ()- Orgun Cluaslcs
:30 Will Osborne
10 00 Sign Off
HY V.T. HAMLIN