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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 5, 1948)
BEND BULLEHM GENERAL NEWS SPORTS CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER f Volume LIa jt BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY. OREGON, THURSDAY, AUGUST 5, 1948 No. 51 ommy Bridges Juris Beavers . o POL STANDINGS (Dy United Frees) msr Urn " L Francisco ' Lkliiul -- 7? Mngeles 70 ho I"pSo - "J :..61 fcrtiand - 55 ,crniento 50 76 Pet. .583 .557 .547 .511 .477 .469 .457 .S&7 on Francisco, Aug. S Ui A l.vear-old right-hander from 'enncssee - - j Iridges showed the pennant- ining UuKianu m-uius umi. ins a rieht arm still had the jrength of victory. The veteran onuc-a, wnu ichod for the Detroit TlRers for 5 years, scaitereu sevrn nus, iruck out seven and chalked up is tenth win of the season as his eaver mates trimmed the Oaks to 3 last night. Down Lbs Angeles way, the An els spanked the ball-playing or hans from Sacramento 9 to 5 on le strength of Tom Hafey's inth inning homer with the ases loaded. The San Francisco eals continued their league-lead-ig pace by defeating San Diego to 3. And the Seattle Rainiers lipped into fifth place by sweep- a twin bill from the Holly wood Stars, 6 to 1 and 4 to 1. Beavers Trailing The Beavers were trailing Oak ind 2 to 3 going into the top alf of the seventh. They rallied jr five runs on singles by Har ey Storey, Ed Basinski, Fenton lole, Bridges, Charley Silvera, nd a double by John Rucker. lole slammed his 16th four-mas-?r of the year in the second inn lg, while Oakland's Nick Etten it his 21st of the season in the ixth. It looked as if the Senators ere going to pocket their second 1,-aight win over the Angels go ig into the last frame. But Albie ilossop doubled in the tying run, nd Hafey put the game on ice ith his four-run circuit blow. Los ingeles manager Bill Kelly used hree hurlers in the game, and Valt Lanfranconi,, who Ditched I le last four innings, got credit ft- .1 ,.. eel uie vii'iuiy. fee . T. . i ut vunincu ij Jt,&n Francisco's Billy Werle I ftalked up his 12th victory as the teals trounced the hapless Pad ies. The Seals came from behind jo take the game. They scored Ihree tallies in the top of the inth when Gene Woodling and llickey Rocco singled and Dino ttestelli and Mickey Shotner dou ilea. Charlie Schanz,. making his irst start for Seattle since his re lent purchase from Kansas City, lave up seven hits and one run is he hurled the Rainiers to vic tory in the onener with the Stars. Seattle displayed an even strong- r moundsman in the nightcap 'hen right-hander Guv Fletcher decked the Stars with three hits. OUT OUR WAY By J. R. WILLIAMS HE GOES A-CHEW SOME TIMES HOTCHEW,' WW J'LL CANE TH' -v THERE IT " k;l BRITCHES OFF YOU COMES --NOW ( m JKlDS IF MDU DON'T I ALLTCX3ETHER J W9L n iit Pru i cdim' J V ....... If WK y YOUR BORN THIRTY VEARS TOO SOOM CW IW IT We. MVK WB. Cashman's and Medo-Land Teams Are Softball Winners Cashman's nine topped the hard fighting Childs hardware team by a 5-2 score In last night's Independent league game. The second game of the evening found Medo-Land creamery out scored in earned runs 3-2 by Jess's Pastime of Sisters, but the Medo Landers took advantage of 14 Pas time errors to win an easy 15-5 In dustrial league encounter. Mayer, Sanders and Raper all poled out doubles for Cashman's in the first inning last night, three runs crossing the plate, enough to win their first, second-half league victory. In that frame Cashman's got Its only two earned runs. Childs had one earned run. The losers went scoreless until the four when they scored twice on three hits and one Cashman error. Both runs scored and all three hits came after two were out. Cashman's had sewed up the game In the top of the fourth with a two-run outburst of their own, coming on. just one hit. Out Slrurle Hits "Childs notched single hits in each of the three stanzas after the fourth, but they couldn't pusn them across against the fine-field' inp Cashman outfit. Jess's Pastime scored three earned runs to Medo-Land's two, but 14 errors by their side made winning a near impossibility Every man on the losing team had at least one error. The winners had only eight hits, and all of them were garnered by three infielders. Second baseman WHlt Dou b ass continued nis mi ting spree, getting three for four, catcher Blucher came up with a three for five night, and third sarker Einman Eot two hits in pomesick Cat Returns After 400-Mile Hike Leominster. Mass. U'i A home- Jick cat walked more than 400 liles in a month and returned :ere footsore and travelworn. Year-old Fluffy, an angora, de- ferted the trailer of the Ben Hans ferry family at Buffalo. N. Y.. f hiie they were en route to a new ome at Moses Lake, Wash. me provincial-minded pussy 'added ud to the hack door of Itieir former hntnn uirinivi nplph. fors found him mewing sadly. Ar rangements were made to for ward him to the Hansberrys by w alter a rest cure. The railways of Greaft Britain andle annuaiiv fi non nnn.non let- 3 era and 150.000,000 parcels, of ihlch 500,000,000 letters and par Is are carried in traveling post nices which cover annually '100,000 miles. Double Murder at Sea Mvstifies Philippines Manila (U' A strange shooting at sea heads the list of current cases in the Philippine consiaou lary's "unsolved" file. A fishing captain sighted a ctnnii npat sailboat bobbin" aim. lessly off the coast. Overtaking it, he found tne corpses ui a man and n hnv. The bodies were rldaiea wnn carbine bullets. Seven empty shells were scattered about the boat, but the carbine itself was missing. There were no signs of a strug gle. Robbery was dismissed as a motive when $25 was found in one of the dead men's pockets. Their boat, which bore the words, "You are always In my heart," In brightly painted letters, appeared on no official registry lists. Officials said the small craft might have drifted several hun dred miles before it was discovered. four up while driving In both earned Medo-Land runs. Use "Blucher Shift" After Sam Blucher's five for five night against Jess's in their last game, they decided to employ a "Blucher shift" against the left hander, and he responded to the challenge by getting three line drive hits into right field. Youngster Chuck Mills pitched a neat five-hitter while being given excellent support by his Medo-L and teammates. There are no softball games to night, but play will be resumed Friday night with All-State meet ing the Jaycees and West Side Tavern meeting the Redmond Vets. Last night's scores: . R. H. E. Jess's Pastime - 5 5 14 Medo-Land 15 8 3 Hawes and Bob Turner; Mills and Blucher. ' 1 , R. , H. E. Cashman's L. 5 6 3 Woods and Jensen; Hurt, Mike Mitchell (5) an4Suuivan. St. Louis Cards TakeJwo Games From New York New York. Aug. 5 UPi Eddie Dver. the man on the fire, had all the answers today as to why his St. Louis cardinals migni shortly be out in front li the National league pennani race. Dyer, supposedly on probation because he hasn't made a better showing thus far with the Card inals, didn't Dotner 10 aiscuss his personal status. He couldn't help but be jubilant his Cards had Just topped the Giants, 7 to 2 and 3 to 0 to move Into second place only four games behind the pace-setting Boston Braves, who were defeated, 4 to 2 by Cincin nati. "Look at us now," Dyer said, "we may have found the spark that will get us started, Just as it did in 1946." '. Braves Beaten The Reds made It three In a row over the pace-setting Braves, topping them 4 to 2 at Boston as Ken Raffensberger outpitched Bill Voiselle. The Dodgers moved into third place ahead of the Giants in the National league when they topped the Cubs, 5 to 4, in the ninth inning on Bruce Edwards single with two out. The activity in the skin-tight American league race was cur tailed by rain but the idle Cleve land Indians remained in first place and the third place Boston Red Sox tumbled to fourth when the Browns defeated them, 9 to 8, at St. Louis. All other American league games were rained out and so was the Pittsburgh at Philadel phia game in the National. MVIOR LEAGUE STANDINGS (Uy.Unitnl I'mj) American League W. L. Pet. Cleveland 56 38 .596 New York 57 39 .594 Philadelphia 59 41 .590 Boston 58 41 .586 Detroit 46 50 .479 Washington 41 56 .423 St. Louis 37 57 .394 Chicago 32 64 .333 National league W. L. Boston 56 42 St. Louis 51 45 Brooklyn 49 44 New York 50 46 Pittsburgh 46 45 Philadelphia 48 49 Cincinnati 44 55 Chicago 40 58 Yank President Is Salem Visitor Salem, Aug. 5 IUI Del Webb, president of the New York Yan kees, was a spectator at Waters park last night when the Salem Senators defeated Bremerton In both ends of a doubleheader base- ball game. . i "T Rpem trt : lava.' hroupht. Vriil Juck)" Webb lojd reporteri Pet. .571 .531 .527 .521 .505 .495 .444 .408 Gehrman to Hurl Against Davidites Paul Gehrman will pitch for the Bend Elks tonight against the House of David nlnet Wally Krcmers, team manager, said this morning. The Davidites will arrive by bus some time today and win re. main here until tomorrow. Kremers said the Elks hope to give the whiskered team a tough battle, although the odds will be all in favor of the Benton Har bor, Mich., nine. The House of David has for years ranked as one of the top traveling squads in the country and usually wins three out of four of Its games Tonight's game is called far 8:30 p.m. at the Bend Municipal park. Farmhouse Quits Moving As Gusher Is Capped Plymouth, Ind. tP Clarence Hoover's farm house has finally come to a standstill. . . . . The house begap moving after a gusher broke through the ground while a driller was sink. lng a new well. The well spouted a barrel of water a minute. All efforts to stop the gusher result ed only In Its breaking out In. surrounding spots. By the time the well was seal ed off, the farm house had one wall cracked and had settled sev eral inches away from a new- chimney, t,hatjh.ad..been added to -it'tecently.'- ' j. Salem Defeats ! Bremerton Twice (By United Pr ; The Salem Senators snapped Bremerton's nine-game string of wins last night as they swept both games, 31 and 8-3, in a Western International league doubleheader. The Senators came from be hind to score all their runs in the sixth frame of the seven Inning opener. Salem took the lead In the fourth inning of the night cap and were never headed. The double win put the Senators in sixth place. Tacoma pared one and one-half games off Bremerton's lead as the Tigers trampled last place Yakima, 15-2. In another slugfest, Vancouver hammered five Wenatchee hurl ers for 20 (ills for an 18-3 victory. me victoria Atnietics spilt its twin bill with Spokane. The Ath letics took the nightcap, 12-3, af ter dropping the opener, 7-3. Sport Parade By Owar Fraley (United Prru SporU Writer) Mow VcrU A nrr R UPI Thn Olympic athletes are making it look easy today as they shatter records like maniacs in a music shop and it must be' considered proof that this is the greatest all time collection of athletes when you contemplate the tremendous upsets being recorded. Right from the start, the U. S. trials, it was evident that the form book wasn't going to mean as much as a pauper to a chorus girl. Sure bets for Olympic berths were Gil Dodds, the gal loping parson; Chuck Fonvllle, Michigan shot putter who broke the world mark with frequent abandon, and Harrison Dlllard, the globe's ace' high and low hurdler. Thro Stars Failed None of the three was able to make the team In his specialty. Dodds nursed anjnjury as they gamboled home without him. Fonvllle developed a soreness of the arm and Dlllard, winner of 82 consecutive races as he skim med to world high and low hur dle records, was shut out in his favorite event. Dlllard, then sneaked on the boat as the third sprinter. He wasn't given much chance. But the lithe Negro turned in the greatest upset of the games by winning the 100 meter dash, even though when In high school he hadn't been fleet enough to make the team. The big victim was Mel Patton, rated a sure winner in the century, who floundered home fifth. So when they got around to the 200 meter dash the big guy was Pannma's Lloyd La Beach. After all, he set a new work record of 20.2 in California Just two months . ago. Again the Jinx popped in, La Beach was third and the now-disregarded Patton was the winner. We . credited ourselves in ad vance with the high jump. The big man was UCLA's George Stamen who had leaped six feet, nine Inches. Winner ut a lowly six feet, six Inches. Oh, yes, Stanlch was third. Smith Wins Polo Vault Boo Morcom and Bob Richards were the main hopes in the pole vault.- Another of our buys, but not too promising, was Owen Guinn Smith, An. air force vet eran. Smith strained his knee three months ago and a specialist advised him to give up pole vault ing or face serious Injury. So it was Smith who took the medal for us, while Morcom finished a disgusted sixth and Richards, third. Remember, we expected to sweep the event if Smith took third place. Lovely Ann Curtis, they said, was a double-dyed cinch In the 100-meter free style swim. Annie came home second to Denmark's Greta Anderson and won Amer ica even more friends with her charming acceptunce of defeat. Zoe Ann Olsen, our national springboard diving champion, took It a bit harder. This little favorite broke Into bitter tears Barron Leading ' AtTamO'Shanter Chicago, Aug. 5 (UV-The 90 top pro's of America's golf circuit turned into the final half of the annual All-American open today with Herman Barron, White Plains, N.Y., veteran, one stroke ahead of the field. Barron, 1947 winner of the championship and most consis tent of the field this year, had a pair of 68's for a 136 total at 36 holes and a one-stroke edge on record breaker Ralph Guldahl of Chicago. Guldahl set a new course rec ord of 64 on his first tour of this tourney links, but he fell apart on his second round for a 73 and a 137. Barron, meanwhile, was steady despite bad playing condi tions, and he seemed well on the way toward his second title in Way s annual event. The title this year will carry a $5,080 first prize, big money in golf's business, even though not enough to cause leading money winner Ben Hogan to appear. U. S. Increases Olympic Lead London, Aug. 5 lUl Unofficial scoring in the Olympic games at the end of 4J events: United States 308; Sweden 99; Fiance 88 '.4; Hungary 72; Turkey 54; Holland 50; Australia 48; Fin land 44; Italy 32; Austria 27; Britain 27; Switzerland 26; Den mark 25; Norway 22Vi; Czecho slovakia 18; Belgium 15; Jamica 11; Peru 10; Argentina 9; Pana ma 8; Yugoslavia 7; Canada 6; Poland 6; Ceylon 5; Mexico 3; Brazil 2, and Spain 1. when our Vlckl Draves nosed her out. And our basketball team, which admits it is the world's finest, came from behind to nose out Argentina, by two very slender points. It isn't only the food sit uation which is tough In London. Bend Elks oc- Tally, pitcher and orig inal pepper game artist has N with the House of David lnce 1914. VS. House of David THURSDAY August 5 8:30 P. M. ADMISSION Adults.... $1.00 Children.... 50c ,?KetltteK!ttJi MM Fried Chicken Mahed Potztoef Buttered Peai and Carrots Lettuce end Tomato Salad Hot Roll. Butter or Margarine) Fruit Icebox Pi (Recipe belo.) HOTt; toot (or the diecM epedell kt eue d to suk thie aiiL Fruit Icebox Pie ptaeeppl 1 peckeae Krewbecrf geletm 1 eupe powdered V4 teeepooa ten Broadcast l Augut$ 7, 1948 1 tableepooa teen eel juice V, cup Pee Milk 1 cop etehem creefcer crumbe yA cup eofl buttec or MercertM 2 ease, I epereteef Drain pineapple, earing juice. Add enough water to juice to make V cup. Heat to boiling. Stir in gelatin until diuolred. Add pineapple, i4 cup pow dered sugar, the salt and lemon juhie. Chill until thoroughlr cold; then stir in milk. Chill until syrupy. Meanwhile, grease a deep 9-in. pie pan. With back of spoon, press cup crumbs on bot tom and sides of pan. Put butter into bowl: work remaining 1 cup of pow dered sugar into butter. Beat in egg rolks. Spread carefully over crumbe in pan. ChilL Fold stiffly beaten egg vhltes into syrupy gelatin miiture. Pour into prepared pan. Sprinkle re maining 'A cup crumbs over top. Chill until firm. You Will Need! 31c LYNDEN Specials Egg Noodles with Chicken .... 16 pz. jar 29c Egg Noodles with Turkey L 16 ox. jar 29c Ravioli 16 oz. jar 19c Boned Turkey - 5 oz. jar 69c Sliced Chicken 5 oz. jar 73c Minced Turkey 4 oz. jar 45c Tamales 7oz. can 15c Chicken Giblet Gravy 7 J oz. can 10c Chicken Fricassee 1 lb. 13 oz. can 89c Mushroom Sauce 7 oz. can 10c NEW LINE ALL POPULAR MAGAZINES Sunshlrie Hi Ho Crackers 28c 23c Nalley's Potato Chips ...... Nalley's Treasure Pickles.. 12 oz. 29c The first time in Hlitory, Kites the its of a won't hand thol actually fly. Posfs GRAPE-NUTS Pet Milk 2 cans Crushed Pineapple can Strawberry Jell-O 3 pkgs. 25c Folger's Coffee.... lb. 53c 35c Thrlfllmix Prepared Hour lb. 10c fend le fireball Twlgf ok 547 lattle Creek, Michigan 12 oz. pkg. 21c Del Monte Sliced Bacon lb. 75c Mock Chicken Legs 3 for 25c R A BBITS HENS FRYERS COMPLETE LINE LOCKER SUPPLIES 39c New Potatoes 10 lb. U.S. No. 1 Transparent Apples 3 lb. 29c Tomatoes 2 lb. 25c Yakima Corn 2 ears 15c CONGRESS FOOD MARKET 210 Congress Three Deliveries Daily Phone 360 DON'T LET BALMY WEATHER FOOL YOU Wake Up!!! It's Time Right Now - V.Sca f m- ft TO THINK IT OVER . . . TRY IT FOR SIZE and Lay-Away YOUR NEW FALL TOPCOAT (WVvc Just pot It In!) Small WPtTT Deposit Will VJ Hold tr Any Coat (y FOUL WEATHER TIME Our new fall shipment of now fall topcoah is loaded with numbers which are sure-fire hits for style and value . . . they give you a "build-up" instead of a "cover-up." Choose from water repellent gabardines, coverts and cavalry twills in grey, tan, blue or brown. Figure-flattering new models in regular sizes, shorts and lonqs. PRICED FROM $39.53 CTOVER-L&AN INC. fl MAN'S STORE