toNDAY, AUGUST 16, 1948 veland Now Wed to Win ague Pennant lew york, Aug. 16 UP) The for Cleveland was a mighty im-ine one today oven though iiill Isn't safe to count any Ihe four contenders out of the line American league race. UKe ine utrai uci iu aiay op because with a season rec nf as victories and 18 defeats Iinst second division teams for ashy percentage of .679, they 32 of their 45 remaining es against the league's "Pat- " and nave oniy 10 inure inst the top club. At the same i ihe second place Athletics o 21 eames left with the top ns and 21 with the second di on clubs. The Yankees have ames to piay wiiii iup tuuius 27 with the laggards. Bobs Win icsterday, Cleveland made hay n against tne saa sacK wnue sweeping its iour game se with them by winning 6 to 2 8 to 0 decisions behind Bob inr and Bob Lemon. 'he Athletics, rebounding from straight deieats, topped tne ikees, twice by 5 to 3 margins, ining tne opener wun iour ;les in a three-run 10th inning, iter five straight victories, the Sox dropped a a to 4 deci to the Senators at Washing but came backto take the nd game. 8 to 7. he Tigers topped the Browns to 1 at oi. AjOuis as rreaay ichinson helped to win his Sith game by hitting a double jja two-run ninth inning. i Brooklyn. Moves In frooklyn again moved to with ijhree games of the first place Aves in the National by defeat I them, 4 to 2- at Boston as Jph Branca, scattering seven fc. edged Johnny Sain in a thing battle. The Cardinals topped the Pi is, 8 to 3 at Pittsburgh, then lipped a 5 to 4 decision to stay fhin 3'4 games of the lead. The Phils defeated the Giants, jo 1 and 7 to 5, Kenny Heintz an holding them to one hit, triple by Whitey Lockman in seventh Inning of the opener. The Cubs came from behind h two runs in the ninth to de- the Reds, 6 to 6 at Cincin- ii but Ken Raf fensberger came Rk to pitch a three-hit, 5 to 0 ond game victory which ended live-game Red losing streak. THREE DROWNED rrysburg, O., Aug. 16 HPi fcee persons were drowned last hl when a ferryboat returning jniekers from a resort island rturned on the Maumee river r here. Two others were treat fin a hospital for minor injur- illetin Classifieds bring results. THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON PAGE THREE "The Lord Is My Shepherd". i ,;-- ""3 r 11 It ' Billy Bruns. 11. sits on the bed In which he was sleeping when a 17-ton trailer truck skidded off the highway In New Bremen. 0 and crashed Into his bedroom. T..e truck ploughed Into the housa. iust missed Billy, and slrmmed Into. the dinln room Lcyan.1. Note the sign over Billy's bed: "1 he Lord Is mv sheDherd." The driver. Lester Snoderass of Chicago. escoDed with scratches. 66 Players Sfarf Practice For First Annual Shrine Game Portland, Aug. 16 (Special) Sunday and sent them through Sixty-six youthful football enthu- siasts, chosen as the best of the graduating seniors from Portland and Oregon high schools, are hard at work here ,in "daily dou ble" practice sessions for their game at Multnomah stadium Sat urday night, August 28. The alumni of the prep ranks represent the Oregon All-Stars and Portland All-Stars, who will clash in the first annual Shriner's hospital game. Game timo is set for 8:30 p. m. with colorful pre-' game ceremonies slated to start half an hour earlier. Coach Dick Sutherland of the state team welcomed his charges Bowling UP AFTER 38 YEARS Bethescla A. D. 30. TAKE UP IK BED AND WALK. So Aimnnded Jesus of the man o had been a cripple for 38 is. Right then and there, at us' word, the man was made ole and took up his bed his t and walked. Later Jesus him with BEHOLD VOU IE MADE NEW. SIN NO RE LEST A WORSE THING IFALL YOU. John 5:1-14. Jt the man charge sin with loss of those 38 years. And God charge sin with the loss rail mankind. For all have sin V and the wages of sin is death 1BLE DEATH eteral separa l from God. So It was by sin, t Cod lost us. And how much M Wants lla hnnlr flirtst lulrl llhe parable of the lost sheep. man nan one Hundred sneep. ypy and nine were safe and ' had strnvpH nu'iv. Tho ulipn. f t went over 'he mountain un tie found It. You see him throw over his shoulder and come "" rejoicing. And Just .so, rwi came to save you and me, lost sheen. Yes God so lov- you and me titat he gave his wrn son na It we believe Him, we should not nprtsh have eternal life. John 8:IB. Wland 1, Ore. This space paid " nuisnoro, ore., family. Adv. With only two matches left in the Mixed Doubles Bowling league, the race is getting to be a tight one. In Sunday nighfs play the two leaders played each other and Nora and Paul Loree won three points from Kay and John Stout. The Stouts won the first game by seven pins, and that was their one point of the evening as the Lorees won the next two games and total pins. Julia and Ted Coul ter whitewashed Alice and John Jenzig for four points, this moved the Coulters from sixth place up to third. Jaunita and Ernie Huff man and Bette Wallan and Fred Grindle split their series, each winning two points. Dorothy and Dave Altier won three points from Lorcna and Grady Goldman. Paul Lorce had the top series with games of 192-192-212, with a split in the last irame keeping him from getting into the coveted "600" series. Loree's total was 596. Dave Altier had top single game of 211. Kay Stout, who has been really dropping the maple pins of late, came up with the top series for the women with games or 1K7-17.) 174. Mrs. Stout has maintained an average of 176 in this league. Julia Coulter had second high scries for the women with a 520. In the sweepstakes held Satur day night, Paul Loree won first place Willi games of 172-237-183-160. Harold Hagen was in second place with a 794 tolal and Richard Christ lanson was third with a 789. George Clark had the match prac tically in the bag with games of 194-211-164, then he slatted miss ing and came up with a 129 fourth game to drop him to fourth place. the first of two weeks of inten sive training Monday at Com merce high. The staters will em ploy a single-wing attack in their quest for victory in the inaugu ral tilt. All proceeds from the game, to be modeled after the East-West Shrine game in San Francisco, will go to the Portland unit of the Shriners' Hospital for Crip pled Children. Assisting Sutherland with coaching chores are Don Mabee of LaGrande, Pete Susick of Marsh' field and Ed Ryan of Klamath Falls. They've all expressed pleas ure at the wealth of material and enthusiasm of the players, and practice sessions have been run off at a speedly clip to get in top form for the game. The Portland squad is working at Jefferson high under the watchful eyes of Eric Waldorf, Its head coach. He is assisted by Paul Durham of Franklin, Joe Enzler of Commerce and Fred Marineau of Benson. Many activities have been plan ned for the gridders during their Portland stay. They will be guests of the Al Kader temple of the Shrine, will visit the local Shrin ers' hospital and will be guests of honor at a University of Ore gon picnic at Jantzen beach park. Betty Evans Will Pitch to Beavers Portland, Aug. 16 mi A girl pitcher will chuck softballs to the best Portland Heaver batsmen Wednesday night in a pre-Pacific Coast league tilt exhibition. On the swat side will be Fen ton Mole, Harve Storey and Dick Wenner whose hat power has helped to hoist the Beavers from the league's cellar to sixlh place. On the mound will be Port land's Betty Evans dul)b?d the , Help raDen distress of MONTHLY , Bobby Feller of girl Softball who bullets 'em past the plate with clock and counter-clockwise wlplash. Her team manager. Erv Lind, arranged the woman-versus-bat- ters test with Bill Mulligan, Beaver general manager. Lind's girl team won the world's title in 1944 and was runner-up inl946. The match is sot before the scredulad game of a Portland-Sacramento series. COMPLAINTS Are you troubled by distress of lemftle functional periodic disturb ances? Does this make you suffer from pain, feel bo nervous, tired at such times? Then do try Lydla E. Pliikham'a Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms. Plnkhmn's has a grand soothing effect on one of woman' most important organs! IVnil F PINKHiM'S LlWin fc I iMitii'iHi w uimrwiw Teams to Decide State Junior Title Salem, Aug. 16 U' The Orogon Junior American Legion baseball championship was on the block today as the undefeated Portland entry faced Albany for the S3C ond time in t"ie double elimina tion playoffs at Waters nark. A Portland win would clinch that team's bid for the champion ship and give Portland an oppor tunity to play-in the area play offs. An Albany win would re quira another game between tlia pair. The two teams meet at 1:30 p.m. barring rain. The Portland nine defeated Albany 5 to 2 in the first game of a doubleheadcr yesterday after their scheduled game Saturday night was- washed out by rain after one Joining of play. Albany 'came back in the sec ond game of Sunday's twin bill to blast 17 hits off Oregon City and win that tilt 16-5, and u chance to meet Portland again. Oregon City ousted Th3 Dalles from the tournament Saturday by winning 4 to 2. Jap-Americans Find Pacific Coast Friendlier Now San Francisco Mi Returned Japanese-Americans on the Pa cific coast feel that the work Nisei servicemen did during the war has helped establish a more friendly attitude toward Japan ese. It has accomplished "more than the diplomats did before the war," they say. Y. W. Abik, San Francisco Japanese American newspaper man, and his staff have just com pleted a survey of conditions faced by returning Nisei and the attitude toward them on the coast. He said: "The attitude is much more friendly than before the war." He believed that is due mainly to two things. First was the ac complishments of Nisei service men during the war, especially tho famed a.id often-decorated 142nd infantry which served in France and Italy. Veterans I'Vlendly Second, he said, is the friendly attitude of - veterans' organiza tions. He found veterans' organ izations, principally the Veterans oi foreign wars a:id the Amer ican Legion, were helping the Nisei fight their battle for remov al of racial restrictions and re peal of national and state- dis criminatory laws. This change in attitude of vet erans organizations, Abike said, is particularly heartening to the Nisei as it was those organiza tions which were the strongest against the Japanese-Americans before the war. Some prejudice still remains, he pointed out. But to counter it, he said, veterans' groups in such large communities as Sacramen to and San Francisco actually have sponsored Nisei posts. Labor Changes Stand Labor organizations- and civic groups are also aiding the Nisei he reported. He said the Ameri' can Federation of Labor has re versed its sentiment since the organization advocated the Jap anese exclusion act of 1924. Abike pointed to the 10-point Flying Saucers In ihe Sky By .1. Hugh Fruett (Astronomer, Extension Division, Oregon Higher Education System) "Much ado about nothing" stems to be our Inherited hang over fi-om the good old days of William Shakespeare. In this writer's opinion nearly 100 per cent of the recent flying saucers, rugs, cigai'S, sausages and other household belongings (hat are ca vortingly merrily in Ihe "ether blue," dismaying excited bystand ers and making glaring newspa per headlines the country over have amazingly simple explana tions. " Consider the "Yakima, Wash ington, object," first reported July 25 over Punkin Center at a height of 3000 feet, at 10:14 a. m. The news got on the radio, and soon hundreds were seeing it. Not very far soutlt of the zenith, It looked like a little white dot. "Sometimes you can see it just by looking and other times you have to use binoculars," reported Don Hunt. Planes sent up to In vestigate seemed to lose It. "Against an 88-mile wind" it was slowly moving westward. For sev eral hours it bucked this terrific civil rights program of President Harry S. Truman. "Two of those points," he said, "were meant directly for Japanese-Americans." One, ho stated, which provided for evacuation claims to make up losses suffered by the Nisei during 1942, has been passed by congress. The second, he said, would provide citizenship to legal residents ot tne united states of Japanese ancestry. The later legislation, he said, "will come before the next regular session of congress in 1949.' "breeze," and around 4:20 p. m. (daylight time) "disappeared high over the western Cascades." The next day another disk or was It the same one? traversed almost the same celestial arc. The descriptions and positions fit . splendidly the daylight ap pearance of Venus. At present, this planet rises about three hours before the sun and is by far the most brilliant object in the dawn. It crosses the sky three hours ahead of the sun all day and is easily seen by good eyes where the sky is clear and very blue. It is useless to look for it if the at mosphere has a milky tinge. At 9 a. m. standard time 110 a. m. day light time), Venus is about due south and very high in the sky a little higher than the sun will be three hours later. It sets around 5 p. m. daylight time. The excitement always created when Venus becomes visible in daylight is an old story to astron omers. In the writer's countrv school days, the report was rife that this was the reappearance of the Star of Bethlehem and the world would soon be destroyed. During the recent war, planes were sometimes sent up to shoot it down. Many other familiar objects might conjure up mysterious mi rages. Thistledown or other fluf fy seeds flying at a considerable height could cause confusion, j Weather bureau balloons, sent up j for determining wind directions ! and velocities, have evidently clone their bit. Sunlight reflecting from I planes too distant easily to be i spotted present round appear I ances. At Roseburg, Ore., a worn i an saw two shadows ahead of a circling plane which, "whenever it flew in a certain direction, look ed like saucers on edge." Perhaps momentary airplane lights at night on bits of cloud may cause confusion. Charles West of Plummer. Ida ho, was called to investigate ','some reported flying discs with my powerful spyglass. They were flying all right but they were just sandhill cranes." Use classified ads In The Bulle tin for quick result Oklahoma rainfall varies from an average of 42 inches annually in the extreme southeast of the -.tatc to 15 inches in the western Panhandle. MEETING 29fh4 Albert Smith, Evang. Subject Tonight: "Precch the Word" Tuesday: "How God Speaks to Man Today" THE BIBLE ONLY Church of Christ ftfil Newport REM), OUK. Custom built KNETIAN &LIND5 Special Designs an Colors Wood Steel -Aluminum FREE ESTIMATES Bend Venetian Blind Mfg. Co. . M8 R. 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