The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, March 12, 1945, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAGE. TWO
Line Up Talent
For 1945 Battles
By Jack Cuddy
(United I'rmu SU Correspondent)
Lakewood, N. J., March 12 lfi.
The New York Giants may have
their troubles this season, but
from the looks of the horde of
hungry young men on hand today
lor the start of spring training,
manpower Isn't going to be a proh
lem.
They have more pitchers, for
example, than several clubs have
players in all positions and by the
time tneir centralized training
program for six farm clubs gets
underway here tnere may De oe-
tween 400 and 500 players to
choose from.
All of which adds up to the fact
that this c-o-u-l-d be a Giant year
and little muffin-mouthed Mel utt
is beaming hopefully over the
prospects.
Thiiurs Look Good
He took a quick look at the
early-bird contingent of 18 play
ers who arrived yesterday, reeled
out a fat and well-thumbed roster
and said that "things look pretty
cood for us.
How did the Giants manage to
come up with this plentitude of
power when other club owners
are walling at the wall because
they can't pick up even two or
three promising newcomers to fill
gaps 7
"Give Carl Hubbell, the Giant
farm manager credit for that," Ott
said. "Hub has lined up enough
players to go around for all of
the farm clubs and I think we
really will have some quantity
here shortly."
In addition to the Giants and
their Jersey City farm club of the
International league, players from j
Danville, Va., a class C team, and i
Bristol, Va., Hickory, N. C, Erie,
Pa., and Springfield, O., all class
D squads will be on hand for con
ditioning activities. Then on
March 25 and April 1, Hubbejl
will conduct tryout camps for
free agents and young players
who have been recruited for pos
sible use on any of the various
clubs. Some of these might even
make the grade with the Giants.
New Talent Sought
What Ott is hoping for most of
all is another Bill Volselle among
the crop of 22 pitchers on the
Giant roster. If another young
star could be found who could
match Volselle's 21-game winning
record of 1944, the Giants might
he on their way to a penfiant.
Pitching was their one outstand
ing weakness last year and be
cause Volselle had td. carry the
load by himself, the Giants didn t
get very far, despite a promising
start. v
There are several outstanding
prospects among the pitchers who
might fill the bill. Of the return
ing staff men, Rube Fischer,
Ewald Pyle and Harry Feldman
appear to bo the best and of
course there Is rubber-armed Aco
Adams for relief purposes.
Van Llnglc Mungo is back after
a year In the army, and the top
prospects up from the minors are
Jtay llarrell, a right handcr ob
tained In a trade with San Fran
cisco; Bill Emmerich, drafted
from the Rochester Red Wings;
Lorcn Bain, purchased from Min
neapolls; and Frank Seward
Andy Hansen, Frank Rosso, and
Walter Ockey all up from the Jer
sey City club. Two left banders,
Melvin Hciman, discharged from
the coast guard, and Don King
signed as a free agent, also may
noisier tne stall.
Oregon Webfeet
Take First Game
Pullman, Wash., March 12 Uli -
The Oregon Webfeet won the first
playoff game for the Northern di
vision basketball title when they
defeated Washington State college
Saturday night 51-41. Haiti line
score was tied at 19-1!).
Washington State took an early
lead of 7-1 with five minutes gone
In the game. It held the advan
tage until late in the first half
The Webfeet, however, led by
Bob Hamilton, who scored seven
points in two minutes, brought
the count to 1D-17 In favor of the
Cougars. Reedy Berg's two free
throws with 30 seconds remaining
tied the score.
After four minutes of play in
the second half, Oregon pulled
ahead 2H-25 and never was headed
from then on.
High man for the Oregon cliil
was Hamilton wllh 20 points
Vince Hanson led WSC with 1
points.
The two teams meet this Frl
day at Eugene, Ore. If Oregon
wins, the series will be over. II
WSC ties the series by wlninng
tho second game will be playei
Saturday night.
DIAMONDS
The quickest way
to lose $25 . . .
Cash Your $100
War Bond
A. T. NIEBERGALL
Jewelor
Nit le t'apltnt ThrtUf
Phone HI K
WATCHES
Out Our Way
GOSH, IT JS WTHERE IT GOES--Y OH, HOW THOUGHTFUL
STRUCK ME I V HOMESICK.' AM' OF HIS MA ALL OF A
PIDM'T BRING WE AIN'T HARDLY SUDDEM THIS IS TH J
UP TH' BUCK IT OF LEFT YET WHEN FOURTH START 1 VE
7 COAL. I PROMISED HE SMELLS TH' MADE WITH YOU TWO-
'"I MY MA I WOULP PORK CHOPS J YOU'LL BE NEXT WITH
I 1 CAN'T GO AN COOKIN' FER. SOME EXCUSE WAIT j
A LEAVE HER LIKE SUPPER, WE TILL YOU HEAR. SOME
1 THAT IF YOU J WON'T SEE HIM 1 DAV OF ME BElW A
yn GUYS'LL WAIT WO MORE .-A &0 CATTLE BAROM--
Jf XV HERE TILL I" ) --v- "v 1 GUESS ITS l
Wr'Lhv UH L 1 , BEST TO GO J
Hj WITHOUT ANY
V, BORN THIRTY YEARS TCP SOON lSSSS.m. J
Coasting Along in
By Gene Friedman
(United Prest Staff Correiipondent)
Los Angeles, March 12 U1 A
pan-American clearing house for
North and South American box
ers was proposed today by htan
ley Paul, former Latin American
newspaperman and army warrant
officer.
"As soon as the war ends, I
want to open an office in Los
Angeles importing and exporting
fighters. There are a flock of
kids in this country who would
like to visit other lands. There
are scads of lads In other coun
tries who would like to come to
the United States," Paul said.
"I would have representatives In
all South and Central American
capitals. Say my man in Venezuela
wires me to send him a light
weight and a welter. All right, I
ask him to send along a light
heavy and a heavyweight."
"But there are a lot of angles
to this business. Top notch Latin
American fighters have a very dif
ficult time getting Into this coun
trytoo many fighting clubs are
closed corporations and it takes
more than a crowbar to force an
opening," Paul said earnestly.
mere are many fiRhters all
over South and Central America
and in the Caribbean who would
be championship contenders if
they got the opportunitv, but it's
very difficult to get them into the
country."
Paul pointed out that It would
be to the promoters' advantage to
use tne Latin fighters.
They take their boxing seri
ously in the Latin American coun
tries it s the same to them as
baseball is to us. There are gym
nasiums all over and almost every
kid starts boxing before he's 15
years om.
Baseball Briefs
(By United Trem)
Cnpe Girardeau, Mo., March 12
mi The St. Louis Browns, hope
ful for the same favorable spring
training weather that enabled
them to get oft to a flying start
in the American league race last
year, opened camp today with
four players on hand.
Early arrivals were pitchers Al
Hollingsworlh, Tex Shirley and
Earl Jones and Infielder Leonard
Schultc.
French Lick, Ind.. March 12 HI'.
The Chicago Cubs hoped to
move on to their regular practice
field today after workmen raked
silt and flood debris off the In
field anil the sun dried the mud
left by receding waters of the
Lost river.
Lakewood. N. J., March 12 Uli
The New York Giants opened
spring training with a bang to
day. 22 players arriving at the
mansion of the late John D. Rocke
feller in time for the first drill
scheduled at 11 a.m.
College Park, Md March 12 ill"
The knuckle ball pitching of
Roger Wolff was the talk of the
Washington Senator training
camp today. The vele
bander bore down for
an right !
the first!
time yesterday in a IS minute hard
workout and threw a baffling ar
ray of the tumping kmukleis, 1
so mixing in an assortment of
curves and a fast hall.
I
March IL'I
Atlantic City. N. .1.
HI1' Most of the IS Now York I
Yankee players who have signed
contracts were oxpevlrri In train
ing camp here today or tomorrow,
but Coach Art Fletcher wondered I
where the team would work out ini
case of Inclement weather.
Terre Haute. Ind., March 12 'IP'
Tho Chicago While Sox, slill
dickering with many of their top
players, pncneit ineir spring nam
ing camp looay as eigni piuvei.sla
today
answered tho first roll call. 1
THE
'there it goes-Voh,
uikccirt" avi' OF
the Sport World
"Alejandro Vega, a welter
weight fighting at Ocean Park
next week, started at the age of
14. Baby Arizmendl started at 12.
That's typical," Paul said.
"Fighting is real work down
there. Some of the very best Latin
American fighters have never
earned more than $100 in their
lives.
"When a Latin-American man
ager tries to get a bout for his
fighter in this country, ho gen
erally has to hire a professional
letter-writer to write the letter.
Then he spends hard-earned pen
nies, yes I said pennies, to pay
for the stamps and in most cases
he never even gets an answer
from the American promoter,"
Paul said regretfully.
it doesn t make sense the pro
moters are the losers in the long
run. so tar, Bane Mcuoy, promo
ter at the Olympic auditorium
here In Los Angeles, is the only
one who has cooperated. He knows
as l do that there are good fight
ers In the Latin countries and
that-financially they are a good
investment.
"There's Oscar Calle, a feather
weight not known outside of Ven
ezuela, who is probably the great
est in the world. There's a fellow
called Relampago Negro (black
lightning) down In Bolivia and
Carlos Soria, a great Argentinian
lightweight, and Kid Filipino, a
Mexican welterweight, and El Zur
do Iguana, middleweight in Santa
Domingo all great fighters I
could go on and on," Paul said.
"Such an exchange would be a
good thing for South America, for
the United Slates, for the fighters,
for the promoters and for boxing
boxing can use a few good
things.
NATIONAL I.KAUUK IHH'KKY
Illy United Praia)
The Boston Bruins edged closer
today to a Stanley Cup playoff
berth in the National league hock
ey race, holding a two-point lead
over the Chicago Blackhawks with
only three games left to play.
The Bruins all but eliminated
Chicago at Boston last night, win
ning 7 to 2, behind the scoring
brilliance of Bill Cowley and Pat
Egan, each of whom made two
goals.
The Montreal Canndiens elim
inated the last place New York
Hangers from playoff considera
tion, winning 11 to 5, in tho final
game of I ho season at New York.
The Toronto Maple Leafs de
feated the Bed Wings 3 to 2, at
Detroit for their first victory of
the season against the Michigan
sextet.
In Saturday games Toronto
drubbed Boston, 9 to 2, and Mon
treal lopped the Hangers, 7 to 3.
Miss Betz, Cooke
Get Singles Titles
Palm Springs. Cal.. March 12
111. -Pauline Hot, of Los Angeles
and Elwood Cooke of Portland,
Ore., today held singles tillcs in
the 10th annual desert tenuis tour
ney. Miss lWz avenged a defeat last
month at Iji Jolla. Cal.. bv beat.
ing Mrs. Sarah Palfrey Cooke 6-0,
2 ti. 6-1 in the finals yesterday.
( ooke. husband of the woman i
singles finalist, toiik Moivy Lewis i
of Los Angeles ( 2. 6 3.
Lewis ami .lack Knenieyer do-
tea ted Cooke and Eddie Woodall
7-fl. 6 2. 6 3 in the men's doubles.
Margaret Osboi up and ,nhn Sis-
son deleatetl l.ouie Brouqh and
Joseph liixler 61. 61 in exhibition
mixed doiihles.
SKATTI.K IKONMKN WIN
Seattle, March 12 up--The Se.
attle lronmen won an easy 11-7
victory over the British Columbia
Junior all stars in an exhibition
game at the ice aiviu last night.
The milkweed butterfly secretes
i is.-iiTee.ihle lim.i i., i r
being eaten by birds.
BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, MONDAY. MARCH
By J.R.Williams
how thoughtful
H, MA ALL OF A
Eight Teams Set
For Tourney Play
Salem, Ore., March 12 (IB With
the Baker Bulldogs the last team
to join
Oregon
u' u . u , ,u '
high school basketball
teams are set to- battle it out for
it r,
the state cmrmpionsbip here be
ginning Thursday afternoon.
The Bulldogs snatched the dis
trict i-i tine tne nara way,
ing back from an initial defeat;
ai (in- nanus ui riuou nivei, alio
winning from the Blue Dragons'
Friday and Saturday night to gain '
the eighth tourney post. j
The opening contest of the state
tournament appears to be one of
the "key" battles with the Wash
ington Colonials of Portland pit
ted against Eugene's highly tout
ed Axemen. The Eugene crew
holds a record of 30 straight vic
tories. Schedule Announced
The complete schedule for the
opening round Thursday is:
o Hiir-i.i-- D-.iij i
(dtricts 15 10) vs7Eugene idE !
tricts5-6.) -
4:15 p.m.-Newberg (districts !
7-8) vs. Baker (districts 1-2) I
7:30 p.m. Medford (districts 1
3-4) vs. Vernonia (districts 13-14)
8:45 p.m. Hillsboro (districts I
9-10) vs. Oregon City (districts
11-12)
Kenneth Wilson
Czar of Big Ten
Chicago, March 12 ill'i Kenneth
L. ITugl Wilson was ready today
for the "most eventful period in
intercollegiate athletics," as he
prepared to assume his duties as
the second athletic commissioner
in the history of the western con
ference. Wilson, 4fl-year-old athletic di
rector at Northwestern univer
sity, will take over the commis
slonersliip May 1, succeeding the
late Maj. John L. Griffith. His
selection by the Big Ten athletic
directors was unanimously ap
proved Saturday by the confer
ence's board of faculty represen
tatives. Fee's Quint Wins
RegionalHonors
Seattle, March 12 tilt Fee's
Music Makers of Portland leave
Thursday for the National A.A.U.
basketball tournament after win
ning the regional finals from Al
pine Dairy of Seattle Saturday
night, 35-30.
The result ended Alpine's three
year stranglehold on the north
west championship and took the
title out of Seattle for (he first
lime in six years. ;
The Coast Guard repair vard'
won third place in the tournament
by defeating the Tacoma Cam
meranos, 57-55.
r.l.Af KOI T ( LOTH SI KP1.1S 1
Denver, Colo. UP Apparently i
uie treasury department has do-
emeu mat nenver is no longer in i I
nanger ol air raids. It has offered ;
for sale 12,000 yards of blackout
cloth.
c- :
year stranglehold on the north-! II "wrous. ,Uor fl itfv 51 UYIIIJI 'ID I . I I
I The Coast Cuard repair. vardH 217 Oregon Phone 325 II I H HPRuiTArf I Atlend to important war duties! Then.
A FY OOP ' .-. 1
OW. GENTLEMEN. FIRST ON MvJESPfo C" "7T lt gr, , V T. HAMLIN j
EidvxfS, .'-i- RFnoA&kll-7ATirkKi io tu' ue--,n Jl I II S MPLV CAM'T aPMP ITR !, If
:vVA ARMY..,.GErMERALTOR,HAVE ISURE P N ) PEOPLE WHO TAKE UP MV 1
VOU AMVTHIMG T'SAV? A DO HAVE. M' lrv-l . TIMWLT.H A LOT OF jjpMsW
1 : ' X V',. V y V JetSSr MTbv, "-v. 5 TALK iWMi
, : s Voa-mi by nut mm. r.W. fff,l (
Brooklyn's Star
Is Not Enrolled
New York, March 12 (IPi Mayor
F. H. LaGuardla called the Brook
lyn college faculty on the carpet
today to explain hoiv star basket
ball player, Larry Pearlstein, one
of five dismissed from school for
accepting a bribe, could play there
more than a year without enroll
ing as a student.
LaGuardla made the sensational
revelation in his weekly radio
broadcast yesterday in which he
charged the college officials with
"laxity, indifference and negli
gence bordering on the unpardon
able." Commissioner of Investigation
Edgar Bromberger, who reported
the Pearlstein incident to the may
or said that the college should
tender public apologies to the In
tercollegiate Athletic association
in which it competes, the schools
it played, game officials and op
posing players.
Would Nullify Games
"The college also must insist
immediately upon a reversal of all
intercollegiate games wherein it
was the winner during the time
Pearlstein was a player," Brom
berger said.-
Bromberger, conducting an In
vestigation apart from the hear
ing in progress in Kings county
l Brooklyn) court, gave Brooklyn
college a clean bill of health in an
earlier report in which he involved
only the five guilty players. He
reopened the investigation, how
ever, when Dr. Harry D. Gideonse,
president of the college, advised
him that Pearlstein never had
been a student. ,
Pearlstein Called
After LaGuardia's broadcast,
Pearlstein was summoned before
assistant district Attorney Charles
N. Cohen. Cohen said that the
youth explained he had gotten
textbooks from the college library
land carried them with him about
the camM. but .hat he never used
: . '
them.
"I don't know why they did not
become aware that I was not a
student,". Pearlstein said. "I told
com-,nohnriv nnvthinir
and asked no
questions."
Nelson, McSpaden
Tourney Winners
Miami, Fla., March 12 (Hi By
ron Nelson and Harold (Jug) Mc
Spaden, golfing pals instead of
opponents for a change, salted
away $1,100 apiece today, the
profit for their victorious cnfllab-
Lio" '"lh,e VJJ"lctmal
f r 5,ri o..j-p
Kat"Xf ii'.T'"T " UC1"..
Tu"' '
' , ' ' ' .,",,.;.,
j4" was mp and ,'uek fol. e first
18 holes when Byrd and Shute
played their best golf. The win
ners were only 2 up at the end of
18. .They increased their advan
tage to seven holes at the end of
28 holes and clinched the match
uii uiu ouin green wnen ivicapa
den's two-foot putt was conceded
for a birdie three.
Nelson, leading money winner
of the winter circuit from Toledo,
O., and McSpaden, third ranking
player, actually received $3,000
first money, but by prearrange
ment each kicked back $100 for a
pool for players eliminated in
earlier rounds.
Shoulder blades of bison were
used for hoes by some American
Indians.
II II JuLfter' buying extra war bonds
"itt ii ii if w - . s irn
,HVM;,'B0N, frt TREAT YOURSELF TO
' I kt,sMA W -a 1 1 1 1 J 1 1 1 I M I HI M I II I I J II I HHHXBIHK U M MB H H H M n 1 I 1 11
II Elmer Lehnherr HSN w St?-
Local Kepresentative 11 ..." . . " '
1 1 ' I 3 I BS 9 S,mpIe of rewarding" yourself I
! ' I 1 3 J"N I , treat yourself to this good Kentucky I
!l . 1 1 to .11 R
KAnfl a "vckvitiiucsi I I "''".iMuiiiiMiiBnoroia-iasnionea.it . W
DClia i CST;,?27 I WJIM you've found Old Hermitage hard to get, if
Abstract Co. i i! j'Umi ,ry oga,n a.1 your s,ore' They my have t
J" j iwri"sf III " fA ,somenw' I
' ' IM-JlSIHIiiiai ..Hi f & -iU '.,WH'"" llllii.'IMiiMiiint minimi ,E
12. 1945
-KBND-
Voice "of
Central Oregon
Affiliated With Mutual
TONIGHT'S FEOGKAM
5.00 Sam Hayes
5:15 Superman
5:30 Tom Mix
5:45 Night News Wire
6:00 Gabriel Heatter '
6:15 Real Stories from Real
Life
6:30 Hugo Vindal, American
Red Cross
6:45 Cote Chorus
7:00 Soldiers of the Press
7:15 Lowell Thomas
7:30 Lone Ranger
8:00 Treasury Salute
8:15 Jan Garber's Orchestra
8:30 Michael Shane
9:00 Glen Hardy News
Mindanao Battle
(Continued from Page One)
southwestern tip of Mindanao a
distance of approximately 800
miles," MacArthur said.
Position Given
Zamboanga, one of the princi
pal ports ol Mindanao, is directly
opposite from Pesangang, on
Basilan island at the northern end
of the Sulu archipelago stretching
to Borneo,
While the troops were expand
ing the Mindanao beachhead, Mac
Arthur's bombers continued neu
tralizing raids oh Formosa and
Japanese shipping through the
South China sea.
Liberators dumped another 80
tons of bombs on Takao, a big
port on the southwest coast of
Formosa, starting fires and ex
plosions among the docks and
nearby installations. There was
no interception.
Other bombers swept the sea
near Kuching, on Borneo's north
west coast, sinking or damaging
a 1,000-ton freighter-transport, a
coastal freighter, a schooner, two
tugs and a barge.
Japs Blasted
In the ground fighting on Lu
zon, the First cavalry and Sixth i
infantry divisions continued blast
ing and burning the Japanese
from caves and pillboxes along
the Antipolo-Wawa line east of
Manila.
To the north, Liberator bomb
ers were blasting a path for 25th
and 32nd division troops converg
ing on the Palete pass, Japanese
escape route into the Cagayan val
ley. The 25th division cleared the
main road to Putlan, six miles
from the pass, while the 32nd
pushed up the Villa Verde trail
from the south to within two
miles of Imugan.
FIVE CARS TAGGED
Five more automobiles were
tagged for different traffic viola
tions, police records showed to
day. Cars registered to Geraldine
Schlaman, 735 Portland avenue;
Vern Schultz, 527 Franklin ave
nue, and Mrs. Anna Beaver, 1236
East Second street, were tagged
for over time parking; a car
registered to Dean Corbin. Rt. 1.
I Box 172, was tagged for parking
on a crosswalk, and Donald A
Primeau, Carroll Acres, was cited !
for not having an operator's !
license. , j
Benjamin Franklin discovered
the existence of positive and nega
tive electricity.
1340 '
Kilocycle!
Don lee Broadcasting System
9:15 Cecil Brown
9:30 Lew Diamond's Orchestra
9:45 The Feeling is Mutual ,
10:00 Fulton Lewis Jr.
10:15 Sherlock Holmes
TUESDAY, MARCH 13
7:00 News
7:15,-Madison Singers '
7:30 Maxine Keith
7:45 Morning Melodies
7:55 News
8:00 Rollo Hudson's Orchestra
8:15 News
8:30 Take It Easy Time
8:45 Today's Bulletin Board
8:50 Organ Treasures
8:55 Guy Lombardo
9:00 William Lang & News
9:15 Morton Downey
9:30 Rationing News
9:35 Old Family Almanac
10:00 Glenn Hardy News
10:15 Luncheon with Lopez
10:30 Paulas Stone and Phil
Britto
10:45 Redmond Victory March
11:35 Lady About Town .
11:40 News (
11:45 Lum 'N Abner
12:00 Hawaiian Serenaders
12:10 Sport Yarns
12:15 Bee Gee Tavern Band'
12:30 News
12:45 Farmers Hour
1:00 Organ Meditations
1:30 Tommy Harris Time
2:00 Meditations
2:15-7Melody Time
2:45 LeAhn Sisters
3:00 Griffin Reporting
3:15 Hasten the Day
3:30 Musical Matinee
3:45 Johnson Family
4 :00 Fulton Lewis, Jr.
4:15 Rex Miller
4:30 House of Mystery
4:45 Lanny and Ginger
4:55 Central Oregon News
5:00 Sam Hayes
5:15 Superman
5:30 Tom Mix
5:45 Night News Wire
NOW
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f Wall at Minnesota
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o.-io jimmy Fldler '"
6:30 American Forum' of a,"
7:15-Lowell Thomas "
7:30 Red Rvde:
8:00 Treasury Salute ' '
8:15 Vaughn Monroe's
Orchestra
8:30 Mysterious Travpto.
9:00-Glenn Hardy IZ -9:15-Rex
Miller 8
9:30 Bob Strong's Orchestr,
9:45-Cote Glee Club "
10:00 Fulton Lewis, jr.
is dedicated to you.
Morton joins David Ross,
the Listening Lady,
Jimmy Lytell and the orcliesta
in a delightful musical
interlude for your busy day ..'
Listen... you'll like it! v
9:15 a.m.
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for' Xy
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