Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1942)
PAGE TWO THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND, OREGON. FRIDAY, AUGUST 21, 1942 Dodger'sWyatt Holds Giants To Single Hit "Rock of Chickamauga" Now One of Brooklyn's Most Valuable Hurler By Paul Schcffi-U (United Press Buff CorrawmuWaO Now York, Aug. 21 amVeter an Whitlow Wyatt, the "rock of Chickamauga" was Just a pebble in the path of the Yankees In the last world aerie. But if his cur rent pitching is any indication, he may prove to be an trresist able force should the Dodgers play the New Yorkers again in the October classic The 32-year-old Georgia born righthander had kicked around in organized baseball from 1928 to 1338, when he was called to Brook lyn from Milwaukee after winn ing 23 games. Now Valuable Player Since then he has become in creasingly valuable to the Dodg ers, especially last season when he won 22 games to lead the Na tional league. Yet, at no time was his worth more clearly demon strated than when he held the Giants to on', hit to bring Brook lyn a 2-1 tri.imph at Ebbets field yesterday. Wlatt missed the pitchers' hall of fame by the margin of Johnny Mize's homer as the Dodgers edged the Giants in the opener of a four-game series. The blow came in the second inning and was the 20th for Long John. The victory gave Wyatt 15 victories against only four defeats. Cincinnati broke a six-game losing streak with a 5-3 victory over the Pirates in the only other National league game scheduled. Johnny Vander Meer pitched his 14th victory as he held the Pirates to six hits. Tabor Gets Homer Jim Tabor's third homer in two days, this one with two on, cli maxed a six-run rally in the filth inning that enabled the Red Sox to whip the Yankees, 7-4, and take the series, three games to four. The Boston victory trimmed the top-heavy American league lead of the Yanks to 104 games. Philadelphia trampled Wash ington twice, 9-2, and 6-1. The nightcap went 12 innings before the A's, who garnered 18 hits, clicked for five runs to score a clean sweep. The White Sox slammed a brace of pitchers for six runs in the fifth inning to coast to an 8-5 victory over the Browns in a night game at Chicago. Out Our Way By J. R. Williams I THANKS A LOT MA" ANP I'LL SURE TO BRING R1C3HT BACK. AS YOUG NEEPS AS MINE - WORSE -VA T-- X'LL H AVE ENOUGH v MUCH WORSE.' NOURISHMENT TO rUH IT.' mmXHt'ti','-. OH, YEH f WELL . DON'T FER.GIT THAT BA&KIT ON THERE WILL CARRY A LOT CP OUR GRUB AN' STUFP THAT SHOULD r COME BACK WITH IT. SO -i-h- 4 ft mvw. ill Witt V0 ,..vW;is-. ia. -com ti rr nca scmncc, nc WHY MOTHERS GET GRAY T M MCC. U. . SAT. Off. Elk Season "Out" For Coast Points League Standings B I'aitrd Press) Nalksnal Ullta w i. ret. w i. n. Rrookhm ..lit U .NI Pittsburgh .&4 fi .474 Portland, Aug. 21 ilP A ruling, 'St-l-"" . "4 4j . nm ...si w .4 . . . 'New Yurk 6 M .Ms ft-stca IS TI .400 Closing ine special eiK minting ciacUinaU u s: .so. i-r.us.iri ...a t .;m season in Coos and Douglas coun-i w"" u" w i r ties, tvent into effect today fo"" ; ' , !&:; g ;gf lowing an order of the state game : curUM e u ,s:i v.i.mt n 47 u .m commission, meeting in extra-,s- u J'ii ;: ordinary session, late yesterday. I w L ivt. w I. rvt. The season was to have extend- - "! m ss .jFr. 74 .4: . . . Sacrams to 81 0 .S.4 laklsjMl . . .5 .4X ed from Aug. 23-31, inclusive. ,s.tti. ... 711 a jisiio!i,..j m 7 .41 The commission announced the owco .71 s j runtend .14 order was in accord with a re-j " quest of Lt. Gen. John L. DeWitt, n I pi chief of the western defense com-, KODIflSOn, bndnk niand. who had asked that the re-1 . 1 gion be closed to decrease iirej D3TTI6 I OniQnT hazards. , . o, . r. Hunting records show more I N York. Aug. 21JU-R a y 1 nrw k...i n-ni ho off.-, "Sugar" Robinson, unbeaten H;ir- Twilight Ball Given Tryout by the emergency closure. A proposal by Frank B. Wire, state game supervisor, that "some lem negro welterweight, is a 3-1 favorite to powder Ruben Shank, former sugar beet farmer of. Den- PIONEER LEAGUE (Bj Uniud Prow) The Pocatello Cardinals revived bst night to beat Twin Falls in t Pioneer league game, but de spite their win Boise increased its league lead. The Pilots played a double header with Ogden, and won both ends of it. Boise took the first game 7-6 and the second 13-8. Pocatello won easily over the Falls team, 7-2, aided by five Cowboy errors. Salt Lake smothered Idaho Falls in another league game, 14-L method be worked out to refund ver. 010., itinigni in tneir lu-rounu license fees to individual hunters" Bl --"; I was considered briefly by the! e,CXp6 don t expect the commission but was not acted 6. "Wire pointed out the commis-1 h!f"! ,,"25 sion owed a "moral obligation toi y r.T" .. " .L; 1 license purchasers but the com mission said the licenses were valid anywhere in the state where the taking 01 elk was permitted. W. I. L. RESULTS (Br United Prfaa) The league-leading Vancouver Capilanos slugged out 15 hits to swamp the second-place Tacoma Tigers 11-4, in Western Interna tional league baseball Thursday night. The lowly Spokane Indians de feated the Salem Senators, 6-1. , Segura Reaches Semi-Final Play Brookline, Mass., Aug. 21 HP Francisco Segura battled his way into the semi-finals of the Long wood bowl tennis tournament yes terday by defeating Vic Seixas of Philadelphia. 6-2. 64, in the only men's singles match of the day. Gardnar Mulloy and Dick Me Kee, both of Miami. FkL, paired to win their quarter-final doubles match over Arthur MacDonald of face that the referee will stop the brawl long before the final bell. (Br Ualbd Pnal Dim-out baseball" cot off to ! a very poor start In the Piivif it' 1 coast league yesterday when cus- turners were conspicuous by their nhsence at twilight contests in 1 San Francisco, Hollywood an : Seattle. ' Only 5SH paid admissions were n corded at Hollywood where Oscar Vilt's Stars took a 7-1 heat ing from Oakland. The San Fran cisco Seals trimmed the league leading I-os Angeles Angols, 9-1, but the triumph was enjoyed by only a handful of Seal rooters. The procedure was repeated at Seattle where Emil Sick's Rain iers continued their sensational stretch drive by defeating Port land. 8-5, in a free-hitting game before just 1.000 of the faithful. I 1 ne lionywooa mHn.tgenifiii, I saddened by the sparse attend ance, canceled today s game In favor of a double header Satur day. Sacramento and San Diego were idle, VoioaW Ctwtrat OrtxjM KBND I M0 TONIGHTS PUOGBAM 5:00 RiS :3t) 5 : 5..V) S:M 6:00 6:15 6:30 6:45 7:00 7:30 7:45 8.00 x:m 9-m 10:tX) Crimson It-all Toniboyers New Your IVfi'tise Reporter Guy LomliaiMo Oivhestra Sports Stories Organ Reveries You Can't Do Hunlness With Hitler Sonny Dunham Orchestra Treasury Star Piunde Ojstie NtOson Orchestra House of IVter MacGi-egor Jay liuriiett Paul Rarron Orchestra Karl Towner Orvhestru Ij-t's Dunce News Satiirttay, Auaust ii, 10173 :00 Sunrise Striute 13 Mountuintvi-s ;t0 News 35 Wake Ifp Time (XI Assembly of Goti, Prinevllle 30 Ameiiran Philharmonic 45 In 1:140 50 Ren Klu&sen ;(K) News 15 Dick Mt-lntliv . :W Sons of . Pioneers iVi Main Street Vurieties :00 JtH- Iteit-hman :15 Organ Treasures A) Jerry Sears Oivhestra 30 News 35 Rmlmond Victory March 30 t)b tYosby Ort-heslra :00 Noomlay Varieties 15 10 Kings and a ljuccn M News 45 Fanners Hour 00 Musical Potpourri 30 U. S. Navv 45 Concert liitll of the Air :00 Walt Schumann OrvlniMta :.') Charlie Hamp :45 Western Serenade l NeighlMirhood Call 15 Tune Tabloid 30 News 35 Pan-American Mi-lodics 45 Tea Time Tunes :00 Matintv Melotlies :3il Ditmars and Olson :45 Ruddy Cole 00 Fairy Tales 15 Carl ltuvaya Oichestra 30 News 50 Modern Melody 5 55 Sports Stories a.00 Your U. S. Navy 6:05 Sunset Trio 6:30 Jimmy Own 6:45 Singing Strings 7:00 Ted Flo Rlto Orchestra 7::i0 U-e Sweetland 7:45 Alvlno Rey Oix-hestra SuniUy, AukukI J.t, ISII. H.W Songs of the Week S:15 Ray Noble Orcnestra 8:30 tarry Stewart 8.45 Divumers Trio 9:00 GtHiH-l Hour 9:30 Al Perry 9:45 Rhythm Rast-als 10:00 Henry Illume Orehestra 10 ,U) Sunday Symphony 11:00 Baptist Chuivh Services 12 (X) I.ud Gluskln 12:25 Camera Club 12:30 Five of a Kind 12:45 Kuto Mendelttsohn 100 Kmmanuel Tabernni-h 1:30 Fdllurlal Page 1:45 Melodecrs 2:IX) Fretidle Nagel Oivhestra 2 :) Will Osnnrne Orehestra 3:00 Galla Rlni 3:15 Zlcm (ioiipel Singers 3 .KI Afternoon Varieties 4 00 Mist'ha RIISN.-II 4 15 Pentecostal Mission 4:45 Fxcurslons In Science 5:tK) Old Fashioned Revival Hour Wll.l.OTT N AMF.II OACII Caldwell. Ida., Aug. 21 Hi President William W. Hall. Jr.. of the College of Idaho today an nounced appointment of Ginirge W. Wlllott. present coach of Fruit land, Ida., high, as athletic mentor of the college for the coming year. Wlllott succeeds Clem Purherry who Is serving as an officer In the navy's physical education program. POI.lt KMKN WALK NOW Beverly Hills. Cal. ll-The po lice deuirtment Is saving rublier by putting officers back on their beats afoot Instead of in patrol cars. Bird -HUNTERS -Deer Get Ready Now! Whllt you can (till t Ammunition! SOON NO MORE! Rifles All Calibres And Ammunition to Go With Eachl Shotgun Ammunition Ptr Remington Winchoitsr Supr-X Box $1.45 Case $27.50 12 Gauge, 3" Magnum .box.. $1.85; com ..$35.50 16 & 20 Gougt boi..$1.35; coto ..$25.50 DUXBACK HUNTING CLOTHES Red Hunting HaH Full Lin .8Sc to S1.2S YES If you wait until tho ammunition and gum aro all gont Wt carry a full line, of ARCHERY equip ment Hunting Bows, Arrow Everything. GET YOUR GAME LAWS HERE Open All Hours Fresh Night Crawlers EVANS FLY COMPANY W. OVIII KVANS, Manager South Knli-mitca lllchway No. t7 USE BULLETIN WANT ADS FOR BEST RESULTSI PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE (Br United Pn R. II. E. Oatland 10. ID 1047 1 0 Hrllrwond III. MO OOftl 5 4 SmlveMii and RainKmdi ; Thomas, Rven and Brntd Ivm And. 21 000 01-4 12 0 San Francisco 000 Z04 3a lt 1 Kaffenabentir. Mallorr. Dubprnw. I.yno and Todd ; Scau. bpperly and Oirrodowaki. K. H. V. Portland 001 110 02 05 10 Smttl. 042 000 lla 6 U i 0.burnr. Srhuhl, Stine and Ltovieh: Fischer and Kac KOVACH MEETS WEHBLE Chicago, Aug. 21 IP Steve Kovach, Pittsburgh steel worker, will attempt to, upset favored WU ford Wehrle, Racine, Wis., today in the final round of the Chicago national amateur golf championships. MA-JOB I.EAGLE LEADERS I Br United Press! Natisnal Lrarsw Plarrr and Club (I. All. R. Rtsr. Br4ilrn .. !i 373 79 Los Angeles and Fred Kovaleski : ixi-rdi. b.u. . m rj 2; of Hamtranck. Mich.. 6-1. 9-7. ! -L1 ! !' m li Second round doubles results in-iiusiai. st. Louis... 104 u2 t& eluded: William Voyt of Philadel- ( Will "z phla and Mlxasdeleated w. L.. Ca-! cordon. Nrr York 112 410 - hall of Philadelphia and Howard McCall of Atlanta, 6-1. 7-5; Al Stitt of Wellesley, Mass., and Harrison Bowbothan of Brookline defeated Tom Brown, Jr., of San Francisco and Ellis Slack of Long Beach, Wrhrht, f hiraKo . . 70 Sprnre. Wsshinsj'n 113 Pcskr. Boston 113 410 277 473 470 H. 120 71 144 lis 100 142 WK 52 IK 112 NO HEAD SPORT Washington, Aug. 21 IP Lee Savold of Des Moines. Ia.. recent Cal, 6-3. 6-4; George Ball of El conqueror of Lou Nova, ruled a Paso, Tex., and Dick Odman of i favorite to defeat squat Tony Mus Seattle, defeated Jack Lynch ofjto of Chicago in their thrice post Newton, Mass, and Don Skakle of J poned 10-round bout at Griffith Quincy, Mass., 7-5, 8. stadium tonight. "FSnoGfl beer I ever flasSed" . Alfalfa Alfalfa. Aug. 21 (Special) John Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Johnson, has return ed from a two weeks vacation in Portland, where he visited his brother, Elmer, and at Tigard, where he visited his sister, Mrs. I. Davenport. Mrs. A. Cordell of Colorado Is visiting her son, R. McCoy and family. Mrs. McCoy's sister, of California, is a 1 s o spending the summer here. Mr. and Mrs. John Ovens and children spent Sunday in Bend. Mr. E. Wetterman, Hermiston, 13 spending a week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Eric Dunlap. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Mayfield and children spent last Sunday at the Horsell and LWesley ranches. May-fields expect to move here from Northwest Redmond soon. He will drive the Alfalfa-Powell Butte high school bus to Redmond this year. The second cutting of alfalfa is now being harvested. Combines are busy with vetch, barley and rye and some field peas were har vested last week. Bend's Yesterdays I TWENTY I IVE YEARS AGO . I From The Bulletin. Aug. 21, 1!17) I The world's greatest battle is be ing fought today, act-uitllng to i word from Franco, with un allied offensive In progress from the sea coast to the Swiss frontier, more than 430 miles. Seven forest fires are now burn ing on the Deschutes national fur , est as the result of last night's , lightning storm. i The hog market continued Its upward trend this morning, with pork selling at $20 a hundred on the Chicago market. Snukes of an e n o r m o u s size hitherto never known to exist In the Pacific northwest are in the country bordering the Deschutes above Bend, according to fisher men who traced snake tracks six inches wide through the dust for two miles. Residents doubt the existence of the large reptiles, but the fishermen say that the tracks speak for temselves. Buy National Defense Bonds Now JIM CANTERBURY SAM. FIIANCISC0 Com to Shops, Thqtrn end Fmonciol District 250 OUTSIDE ROOMS oil with tub and showr Ui OUt PHSON . . . l.M TWO PiRSONS. . $3.00 TWIN MDS 3.J0 AMHY ROOMS rOt OUt...4.M 7S0 SUTTER . AT TAYLOR That's what they say . . . thousands of them . . . when they first try Rainier Club Extra Pale Beer. Are you wise to it yet? Well don't wait, man! Get a cold bottle right now and pour a tall, chilled glass of sparkling, pale-amber refreshment. The flavor wins you - a friendly mellow flavor that only slow, slow aging puts into beer. Rainier never hurries . . . No need to hurry with the West's greatest brewing plant AMD the uiorWs largest aging tank. That's why you get a beet with a lively tang yet a delicate, mellow flavor . . . Mellow-aged, we call it. It's beer at its best . . . Buy Rainier Club . . . for Good Cheer. Rainier Brewing Cetnptnr. San FrenciKo. Cat BUY BIG BOTTLES .Save Money-Sov Copt 61 or for yovf Monty onrf ton mtvo cop molol for other mm ky Mw roryor litot. Ono qvart Mtvot t apt. So bvy tofnior oor to too 22-9M. ood 32-oi. Mmu C7b AGED DEER & ALE HAINES DISTRIBUTING COMPANY, BEND, OREGON i ' j M v Brooks-Scanlon Quality Pine Lumber Brooks-Scanlon Lumber Company Inc. 7tf K PAY ENVELOPE yRHES tX'RNlSH employment for almost every member of this community. Sonic work in the forests . . . others in the mills, processing the timber crop . . , other citiicns rely for their liveli hood on the trade furnished by the people employed by the forest products industries. Burning trees hurt all of us. A blaze which con. tumcs growing timber may destroy the pay envelop , of every member of the community. Burned trees create no trade or employment. Help keep fire out of the woods. If we work together we can lick Forest Enemy Number 1, The Shevlin-Hixon Company Brooks-Scanlon Lumber Company Inc. M - II ALLEY OOP C CrT7T--LjOST VJMEM WE - 1 llfl HB - KEEPER, THAT cjOTCMA... ( '"P;, I II 1 fj H CLOG& CALL StKiOSAUR S tCW-'( ,1 1 kl ( By V. T. HAMl FREEDOM pwcIless! iNvcst IN WAR BOND5& STAMPS TODAY .IN f ss. v ( hi kjhck is so vrs.x jj rinnTi V rCf tULLOF UOM.HE AMD THE BARS NaVkflllllll If -"0 INTO THE ( l-IOM DCXNKiy llllllllll 7 THE GOOO 5 TJL. c A ntnl II' V 8-??.